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The Archeology of
Knowledge,The Unities of Discourse
The use of concepts of discontinuity, rupture, threshold, limit, series, and
transformation present all historical analysis not only with questions of
procedure, but with theoretical problems. It is these problems that will be
studied here (the questions of procedure will be examined in later empirical
studies - if the opportunity, the desire, and the courage to undertake them
do not desert me). These theoretical problems too will be examined only in a
particular field: in those disciplines - so unsure of their frontiers, and
so vague in content - that we call the history of ideas, or of thought, or
of science, or of knowledge. But there is a negative work to be carried out
first: we must rid ourselves of a whole mass of notions, each of which, in
its own way, diversifies the theme of continuity. They may not have a very
rigorous conceptual structure, but they have a very precise function. Take
the notion of tradition: it is intended to give a special temporal status to
a group of phenomena that are both successive and identical (or at least
similar); it makes it possible to rethink the dispersion of history in the
form of the same; it allows a reduction of the difference proper to every
beginning, in order to pursue without discontinuity the endless search for
the origin; tradition enables us to isolate the new against a background of
permanence, and to transfer its merit to originality, to genius, to the
decisions proper to individuals. Then there is the notion of influence,
which provides a support - of too magical a kind to be very amenable to
analysis - for the facts of transmission and communication; which refers to
an apparently causal process (but with neither rigorous delimitation nor
theoretical definition) the phenomena of resemblance or repetition; which
links, at a distance and through time - as if through the mediation of a
medium of propagation such defined unities as individuals, uvres, notions,
or theories. There are the notions of development and evolution: they make
it possible to group a succession of dispersed events, to link them to one
and the same organising principle, to subject them to the exemplary power of
life (with its adaptations, its capacity for innovation, the incessant
correlation of its different elements, its systems of assimilation and
exchange), to discover, already at work in each beginning, a principle of
coherence and the outline of a future unity, to master time through a
perpetually reversible relation between an origin and a term that are never
given, but are always at work. There is the notion of 'spirit', which
enables us to establish between the simultaneous or successive phenomena of
a given period a community of meanings, symbolic links, an interplay of
resemblance and reflexion, or which allows the sovereignty of collective
consciousness to emerge as the principle of unity and explanation. We must
question those ready-made syntheses, those groupings that we normally accept
before any examination, those links whose validity is recognised from the
outset; we must oust those forms and obscure forces by which we usually link
the discourse of one man with that of another; they must be driven out from
the darkness in which they reign. And instead of according them unqualified,
spontaneous value, we must accept, in the name of methodological rigour,
that, in the first instance, they concern only a population of dispersed
events.We must also question those divisions or groupings with which we have
become so familiar. Can one accept, as such, the distinction between the
major types of discourse, or that between such forms or genres as science,
literature, philosophy, religion, history, fiction, etc., and which tend to
create certain great historical individualities? We are not even sure of
ourselves when we use these distinctions in our own world of discourse, let
alone when we are analysing groups of statements which, when first
formulated, were distributed, divided, and characterised in a quite
different way: after all, 'literature' and 'politics' are recent categories,
which can be applied to medieval culture, or even classical culture, only by
a retrospective hypothesis, and by an interplay of formal analogies or
semantic resemblances; but neither literature, nor politics, nor philosophy
and the sciences articulated the field of discourse, in the seventeenth or
eighteenth century, as they did in the nineteenth century. In any case,
these divisions - whether our own, or those contemporary with the discourse
under examination - are always themselves reflexive categories, principles
of classification, normative rules, institutionalised types: they, in turn,
are facts of discourse that deserve to be analysed beside others; of course,
they also have complex relations with each other, but they are not
intrinsic, autochthonous, and universally recognisable characteristics.But
the unities that must be suspended above all are those that emerge in the
most immediate way: those of the book and the uvre. At first sight, it would
seem that one could not abandon these unities without extreme artificiality.
Are they not given in the most definite way? There is the material
individualisation of the book, which occupies a determined space which has
an economic value, and which itself indicates, by a number of signs, the
limits of its beginning and its end; and there is the establishment of an
oeuvre, which we recognise and delimit by attributing a certain number of
texts to an author. And yet as soon as one looks at the matter a little more
closely the difficulties begin. The material unity of the book? Is this the
same in the case of an anthology of poems, a collection of posthumous
fragments, Desargues' Trait des Coniques, or a volume of Michelet's Histoire
de France? Is it the same in the case of Mallarm's Un Coup de , the trial of
Gilles de Rais, Butor's San Marco, or a Catholic missal? In other words, is
not the material unity of the volume a weak, accessory unity in relation to
the discursive unity of which it is the support? But is this discursive
unity itself homogeneous and uniformly applicable? A novel by Stendhal and a
novel by Dostoyevsky do not have the same relation of individuality as that
between two novels belonging to Balzac's cycle La Comedie humaine; and the
relation between Balzac's novels is not the same as that existing between
Joyce's Ulysses and the Odyssey. The frontiers of a book are never
clear-cut: beyond the title, the first lines, and the last full stop, beyond
its internal configuration and its autonomous form, it is caught up in a
system of references to other books, other texts, other sentences: it is a
node within a network. And this network of references is not the same in the
case of a mathematical treatise, a textual commentary, a historical account,
and an episode in a novel cycle; the unity of the book, even in the sense of
a group of relations, cannot be regarded as identical in each case. The book
is not simply the object that one holds in one's hands; and it cannot remain
within the little parallelepiped that contains it: its unity is variable and
relative. As soon as one questions that unity, it lows its self-evidence; it
indicates itself, constructs itself, only on the basis Of a complex field of
discourse.
The problems raised by the uvre are even more difficult. Yet, at first
sight, what could be more simple? A collection of texts that can be
designated by the sign of a proper name. But this designation (even leaving
to one side problems of attribution) is not a homogeneous function: does the
name of an author designate in the same way a text that he has published
under his name, a text that he has presented under a pseudonym, another
found after his death in the form of an unfinished draft, and another that
is merely a collection of jottings, a notebook? The establishment of a
complete oeuvre presupposes a number of choices that are difficult to
justify or even to formulate: is it enough to add to the texts published by
the author those that he intended for publication but which remained
unfinished by the fact of his death? Should one also include all his
sketches and first drafts, with all their corrections and crossings out?
Should one add sketches that he himself abandoned? And what status should be
given to letters, notes, reported conversations, transcriptions of what he
said made by those present at the time, in short, to that vast mass of
verbal traces left by an individual at his death, and which speak in an
endless confusion so many different languages (langages)? In any case, the
name Mallarm does not refer in the same way to his themes (translation
exercises from French into English), his translations of Edgar Allan Poe,
his poems, and his replies to questionnaires; similarly, the same relation
does not exist between the name Nietzsche on the one hand and the youthful
autobiographies, the scholastic dissertations, the philological articles,
Zarathustra, Ecco Homo, the letters, the last postcards signed 'Dionysos' or
'Kaiser Nietzsche', and the innumerable notebooks with their jumble of
laundry bills and sketches for aphorisms. In fact, if one speaks, so
undiscriminately and unreflectingly of an author's uvre, it is because one
imagines it to be defined by a certain expressive function. One is admitting
that there must be a level (as deep as it is necessary to imagine it) at
which the oeuvre emerges, in all its fragments, even the smallest, most
inessential ones, as the expression of the thought, the experience, the
imagination, or the unconscious of the author, or, indeed, of the historical
determinations that operated upon him. But it is at once apparent that such
a unity, far from being given immediately is the result of an operation;
that this operation is interpretative (since it deciphers, in the text, the
transcription of something that it both conceals and manifests); and that
the operation that determines the opus, in its unity, and consequently the
uvre itself, will not be the same in the case of the author of the Th tre et
son Double (Artaud) and the author of the Tractatus (Wittgenstein), and
therefore when one speaks of an uvre in each case one is using the word in a
different sense. The uvre can be regarded neither as an immediate unity, nor
as a certain unity, nor as a homogeneous unity.
One last precaution must be taken to disconnect the unquestioned
continuities by which we organise, in advance, the discourse that we are to
analyse: we must renounce two linked, but opposite themes. The first
involves a wish that it should never be possible to assign, in the order of
discourse, the irruption of a real event; that beyond any apparent
beginning, there is always a secret origin - so secret and so fundamental
that it can never be quite grasped in itself. Thus one is led inevitably,
through the navety of chronologies, towards an ever-receding point that is
never itself present in any history; this point is merely its own void; and
from that point all beginnings can never be more than recommencements or
occultation (in one and the same gesture, this and that). To this theme is
connected another according to which all manifest discourse is secretly
based on an 'already-said'; and that this 'already said' is not merely a
phrase that has already been spoken, or a text that has already been
written, but a 'never-said', an incorporeal discourse, a voice as silent as
a breath, a writing that is merely the hollow of its own mark. It is
supposed therefore that everything that is formulated in discourse was
already articulated in that semi-silence that precedes it, which continues
to run obstinately beneath it, but which it covers and silences. The
manifest discourse, therefore, is really no more than the repressive
presence of what it does not say; and this 'not-said' is a hollow that
undermines from w thin all that is said. The first theme sees the historical
analysis of discourse as the quest for and the repetition of an origin that
eludes all historical determination; the second sees it as the
interpretation of 'hearing' of an 'already-said' that is at the same time a
'not-said'. We must renounce all those themes whose function is to ensure
the infinite continuity of discourse and its secret presence to itself in
the interplay of a constantly recurring absence. We must be ready to receive
every moment of discourse in its sudden irruption; in that punctuality in
which it appears, and in that temporal dispersion that enables it to be
repeated, known, forgotten, transformed, utterly erased, and hidden, far
from all view, in the dust of books. Discourse must not be referred to the
distant presence of the origin, but treated as and when it occurs.These
pre-existing forms of continuity, all these syntheses that are accepted
without question, must remain in suspense. They must not be rejected
definitively of course, but the tranquillity with which they are accepted
must be disturbed; we must show that they do not come about of themselves,
but are always the result of a construction the rules of which must be
known, and the justifications of which must be scrutinised: we must define
in what conditions and in view of which analyses certain of them are
legitimate; and we must indicate which of them can never be accepted in any
circumstances. It may be, for example, that the notions of 'influence' or
'evolution' belong to a criticism that puts them - for the foreseeable
future - out of use. But need we dispense for ever with the uvre, the
'book', or even such unities as 'science' or 'literature'? Should we regard
them as illusions, illegitimate constructions, or ill-acquired results?
Should we never make use of them, even as a temporary support, and never
provide them with a definition? What we must do, in fact, is to tear away
from them their virtual self-evidence, and to free the problems that they
pose; to recognise that they are not the tranquil locus on the basis of
which other questions (concerning their structure, coherence, systematicity,
transformations) may be posed, but that they themselves pose a whole cluster
of questions (What are they? How can they be defined or limited? What
distinct types of laws can they obey? What articulation are they capable of?
What sub-groups can they give rise to? What specific phenomena do they
reveal in the field of discourse?). We must recognise that they may not, in
the last resort, be what they seem at first sight. In short, that they
require a theory, and that this theory cannot be constructed unless the
field of the facts of discourse on the basis of which those facts are built
up appears in its non-synthetic purity.
And I, in turn, will do no more than this: of course, I shall take as my
starting-point whatever unities are already given (such as psychopathology,
medicine, or political economy); but I shall not place myself inside these
dubious unities in order to study their internal configuration or their
secret contradictions. I shall make use of them just long enough to ask
myself what unities they form; by what right they can claim a field that
specifies them in space and a continuity that individualises them in time;
according to what laws they are formed; against the background of which
discursive events they stand out; and whether they are not, in their
accepted and quasi-institutional individuality, ultimately the surface
effect of more firmly grounded unities. I shall accept the groupings that
history suggests only to subject them at once to interrogation; to break
them up and then to see whether they can be legitimately reformed; or
whether other groupings should be made; to replace them in a more general
space which, while dissipating their apparent familiarity, makes it possible
to construct a theory of them. Once these immediate forms of continuity are
suspended, an entire field is set free. A vast field, but one that can be
defined nonetheless: this field is made up of the totality of all effective
statements (whether spoken or written), in their dispersion as events and in
the occurrence that is proper to them. Before approaching, with any degree
of certainty, a science, or novels, or political speeches, or the uvre of an
author, or even a single book, the material with which one is dealing is, in
its raw, neutral state, a population of events in the space of discourse in
general. One is led therefore to the project of a pure description of
discursive events as the horizon for the search for the unities that form
within it. This description is easily distinguishable from an analysis of
the language. Of course, a linguistic system can be established (unless it
is constructed artificially) only by using a corpus of statements, or a
collection of discursive facts; but we must then define, on the basis of
this grouping, which has value as a sample, rules that may make it possible
to construct other statements than these: even if it has long since
disappeared, even if it is no longer spoken, and can be reconstructed only
on the basis of rare fragments, a language (langue) is still a system for
possible statements, a finite body of rules that authorises an infinite
number of performances. The field of discursive events, on the other hand,
is a grouping that is always finite and limited at any moment to the
linguistic sequences that have been formulated; they may be innumerable,
they may, in sheer size, exceed the capacities of recording, memory, or
reading: nevertheless they form a finite grouping. The question posed by
language analysis of some discursive fact or other is always: according to
what rules has a particular statement been made, and consequently according
to what rules could other similar statements be made? The description of the
events of discourse poses a quite different question: how is it that one
particular statement appeared rather than another? It is also clear that
this description of discourses is in opposition to the history of thought.
There too a system of thought can be reconstituted only on the basis of a
definite discursive totality. But this totality is treated in such a way
that one tries to rediscover beyond the statements themselves the intention
of the speaking subject, his conscious activity, what he meant, or, again,
the unconscious activity that took place, despite himself, in what he said
or in the almost imperceptible fracture of his actual words; in any case, we
must reconstitute another discourse, rediscover the silent murmuring, the
inexhaustible speech that animates from within the voice that one hears,
re-establish the tiny, invisible text that runs between and sometimes
collides with them. The analysis of thought is always allegorical in
relation to the discourse that it employs. Its question is unfailingly: what
was being said in what was said? The analysis of the discursive field is
orientated in a quite different way; we must grasp the statement in the
exact specificity of its occurrence; determine its conditions of existence,
fix at least its limits, establish its correlations with other statements
that may be connected with it, and show what other forms of statement it
excludes. We do not seek below what is manifest the half silent murmur of
another discourse; we must show why it could not be other than it was, in
what respect it is exclusive of any other, how it assumes, in the midst of
others and in relation to them, a place that no other could occupy. The
question proper to such an analysis might be formulated in this way: what is
this specific existence that emerges from what is said and nowhere else? We
must ask ourselves what purpose is ultimately served by this suspension of
all the accepted unities, if, in the end, we return to the unities that we
pretended to question at the outset. In fact, the systematic erasure of all
given unities enables us first of all to restore to the statement the
specificity of its occurrence, and to show that discontinuity is one of
those great accidents that create cracks not only in the geology of history,
but also in the simple fact of the statement; it emerges in its historical
irruption; what we try to examine is the incision that it makes, that
irreducible - and very often tiny - emergence. However banal it may be,
however unimportant its consequences may appear to be, however quickly it
may be forgotten after its appearance, however little heard or however badly
deciphered we may suppose it to be, a statement is always an event that
neither the language (langue) nor the meaning can quite exhaust. It is
certainly a strange event: first, because on the one hand it is linked to
the gesture of writing or to the articulation of speech, and also on the
other hand it opens up to itself a residual existence in the field of a
memory, or in the materiality of manuscripts, books, or any other form of
recording; secondly, because, like every event, it is unique, yet subject to
repetition, transformation, and reactivation; thirdly, because it is linked
not only to the situations that provoke it, and to the consequences that it
gives rise to, but at the same time, and in accordance with a quite
different modality, to the statements that precede and follow it.But if we
isolate, in relation to the language and to thought, the occurrence of the
statement/event, it is not in order to spread over everything a dust of
facts. it is in order to be sure that this occurrence is not linked with
synthesising operations of a purely psychological kind (the intention of the
author,, the form of his mind, the rigour of his thought, the themes that
obsess him, the project that traverses his existence and gives it meaning)
and to be able to grasp other forms of regularity, other types of relations.
Relations between statements (even if the author is unaware of them; even if
the statements do not have the same author; even if the authors were unaware
of each other's existence); relations between groups of statements thus
established (even if these groups do not concern the same, or even adjacent,
fields; even if they do not possess the same formal level; even if they are
not the locus of assignable exchanges); relations between statements and
groups of statements and events of a quite different kind (technical,
economic, social, political). To reveal in all its purity the space in which
discursive events are deployed is not to undertake to re-establish it in an
isolation that nothing could overcome; it is not to close it upon itself; it
is to leave oneself free to describe the interplay of relations within it
and outside it.The third purpose of such a description of the facts of
discourse is that by freeing them of all the groupings that purport to be
natural, immediate, universal unities, one is able to describe other
unities, but this time by means of a group of controlled decisions.,
Providing one defines the conditions clearly, it might be legitimate to
constitute, on the basis of correctly described relations, discursive groups
that are not arbitrary, and yet remain invisible. Of course, these relations
would never be formulated for themselves in the statements in question
(unlike, for example, those explicit relations that are posed and spoken in
discourse itself, as in the form of the novel, or a series of mathematical
theorems). But in no way would they constitute a sort of secret discourse,
animating the manifest discourse from within; it is not therefore an
interpretation of the facts of the statement that might reveal them, but the
analysis of their coexistence, their succession, their mutual functioning,
their reciprocal determination, and their independent or correlative
transformation.
However, it is not possible to describe all the relations that may emerge in
this way without some guide-lines. A provisional division must be adopted as
an initial approximation: an initial region that analysis will subsequently
demolish and, if necessary, reorganise. But how is such a region to be
circumscribed? on the one hand, we must choose, empirically, a field in
which the relations are likely to be numerous, dense, and relatively easy to
describe: and in what other region do discursive events appear to be more
closely linked to one another, to occur in accordance with more easily
decipherable relations, than in the region usually known as science? But, on
the other hand, what better way of grasping in a statement, not the moment
of its formal structure and laws of construction, but that of its existence
and the rules that govern its appearance, if not by dealing with relatively
uniformalised groups of discourses, in which the statements do not seem
necessarily to be built on the rules of pure syntax? How can we be sure of
avoiding such divisions as the uvre, or such categories as 'influence',
unless, from the very outset, we adopt sufficiently broad fields and scales
that are chronologically vast enough? Lastly, how can we be sure that we
will not find ourselves in the grip of all those over-hasty unities or
syntheses concerning the speaking subject, or the author of the text, in
short, all anthropological categories? Unless, perhaps, we consider all the
statements out of which these categories are constituted - all the
statements that have chosen the subject of discourse (their own subject) as
their 'object' and have undertaken to deploy it as their field of knowledge?
This explains the de facto privilege that I have accorded to those
discourses that, to put it very schematically, define the 'sciences of man'.
But it is only a provisional privilege. Two facts must be constantly borne
in mind: that the analysis of discursive events is in no way limited to such
a field; and that the division of this field itself cannot be regarded
either as definitive or as absolutely valid; it is no more than an initial
approximation that must allow relations to appear that may erase the limits
of this initial outline.
Discursive Formations
I have undertaken, then, to describe the relations between statements. I
have been careful to accept as valid none of the unities that would normally
present themselves to anyone embarking on such a task. I have decided to
ignore no form of discontinuity, break, threshold, or limit. I have decided
to describe statements in the field of discourse and the relations of which
they are capable. As I see it, two series of problems arise at the outset:
the first, which I shall leave to one side for the time being and shall
return to later, concerns the indiscriminate use that I have made of the
terms statement, event, and discourse; the second concerns the relations
that may legitimately be described between the statements that have been
left in their provisional, visible grouping.There are statements, for
example, that are quite obviously concerned and have been from a date that
is easy enough to determine - with political economy, or biology, or
psychopathology; there are others that equally obviously belong to those
age-old continuities known as grammar or medicine. But what are these
unities? How can we say that the analysis of headaches carried out by Willis
or Charcot belong to the same order of discourse? That Petty's inventions
are in continuity with Neumann's econometry? That the analysis of judgement
by the Port-Royal grammarians belongs to the same domain as the discovery of
vowel gradations in the Indo-European languages? What, in fact, are
medicine, grammar, or political economy? Are they merely a retrospective
regrouping by which the contemporary sciences deceive themselves as to their
own past? Are they forms that have become established once and for all and
have gone on developing through time? Do they conceal other unities? And
what sort of links can validly be recognised between all these statements
that form, in such a familiar and insistent way, such an enigmatic mass?
First hypothesis - and the one that, at first sight, struck me as being the
most likely and the most easily proved: statements different in form, and
dispersed in time, form a group if they refer to one and the same object.
Thus, statements belonging to psychopathology all seem to refer to an object
that emerges in various ways in individual or social experience and which
may be called madness. But I soon realised that the unity of the object
'madness' does not enable one to individualise a group of statements, and to
establish between them a relation that is both constant and describable.
There are two reasons for this. It would certainly be a mistake to try to
discover what could have been said of madness at a particular time by
interrogating the being of madness itself, its secret content, its silent,
self-enclosed truth; mental illness was constituted by all that was said in
all the statements that named it, divided it up, described it, explained it,
traced its developments, indicated its various correlations, judged it, and
possibly gave it speech by articulating, in its name, discourses that were
to be taken as its own. Moreover, this group of statements is far from
referring to a single object, formed once and for all, and to preserving it
indefinitely as its horizon of inexhaustible ideality; the object presented
as their correlative by medical statements of the seventeenth or eighteenth
century is not identical with the object that emerges in legal sentences or
police action; similarly, all the objects of psychopathological discourses
were modified from Pinel or Esquirol to Bleuler: it is not the same
illnesses that are at issue in each of these cases; we are not dealing with
the same madmen.One might, perhaps one should, conclude from this
multiplicity of objects that it is not possible to accept, as a valid unity
forming a group of statements, a 'discourse, concerning madness'. Perhaps
one should confine one's attention to those groups of statements that have
one and the same object: the discourses on melancholia, or neurosis, for
example. But one would soon realise that each of these discourses in turn
constituted its object and worked it to the point of transforming it
altogether. So that the problem arises of knowing whether the unity of a
discourse is based not so much on the permanence and uniqueness of an object
as on the space in which various objects emerge and are continuously
transformed. Would not the typical relation that would enable us to
individualise a group of statements concerning madness then be: the rule of
simultaneous or successive emergence of the various objects that are named,
described, analysed, appreciated, or judged in that relation? The unity of
discourses on madness would not be based upon the existence of the object
'madness', or the constitution of a single horizon of objectivity; it would
be the interplay of the rules that make possible the appearance of objects
during a given period of time: objects that are shaped by measures of
discrimination and repression, objects that are differentiated in daily
practice, in law, in religious casuistry, in medical diagnosis, objects that
are manifested in pathological descriptions, objects that are circumscribed
by medical codes, practices, treatment, and care. Moreover, the unity of the
discourses on madness would be the interplay of the rules that define the
transformations of these d' rent objects, their non-identity through time,
the break produced in them, the internal discontinuity that suspends their
permanence. Paradoxically, to define a group of statements in terms of its
individuality would be to define the dispersion of these objects, to grasp
all the interstices that separate them, to measure the distances that reign
between them - in other words, to formulate their law of division.
Second hypothesis to define a group of relations between statements: their
form and type of connection. It seemed to me, for example, that from the
nineteenth century medical science was characterised not so much by its
objects or concepts as by a certain style, a certain constant manner of
statement. For the first time, medicine no longer consisted of a group of
traditions, observations, and heterogeneous practices, but of a corpus of
knowledge that presupposed the same way of looking at things, the same
division of the perceptual field, the same analysis of the pathological fact
in accordance with the visible space of the body, the same system of
transcribing what one perceived in what one said (same vocabulary, same play
of metaphor); in short, it seemed to me that medicine was organised as a
series of descriptive statements. But, there again, I had to abandon this
hypothesis at the outset and recognise that clinical discourse was just as
much a group of hypotheses about life and death, of ethical choices, of
therapeutic decisions, of institutional regulations, of teaching models, as
a group of descriptions; that the descriptions could not, in any case, be
abstracted from the hypotheses, and that the descriptive statement was only
one of the formulations present in medical discourse. I also had to
recognise that this description has constantly been displaced: either
because, from Bichat to cell pathology, the scales and guide-lines have been
displaced; or because from visual inspection, auscultation and palpation to
the use of the microscope and biological tests, the information system has
been modified; or, again, because, from simple anatomo-clinical correlation
to the delicate analysis of physio-pathological processes, the lexicon of
signs and their decipherment has been entirely reconstituted; or, finally,
because the doctor has gradually ceased to be himself the locus of the
registering and interpretation of information, and because, beside him,
outside him, there have appeared masses of documentation, instruments of
correlation, and techniques of analysis, which, of course, he makes use of,
but which modify his position as an observing subject in relation to the
patient.
All these alterations, which may now lead to the threshold of a new
medicine, gradually appeared in medical discourse throughout the nineteenth
century. If one wished to define this discourse by a codified and normative
system of statement, one would have to recognise that this medicine
disintegrated as soon as it appeared and that it really found its
formulation only in Bichat and Laennec. If there is a unity, its principle
is not therefore a determined form of statements; is it not rather the group
of rules, which, simultaneously or in turn, have made possible purely
perceptual descriptions, together with observations mediated through
instruments, the procedures used in laboratory experiments, statistical
calculations, epidemiological or demographic observations, institutional
regulations, and therapeutic practice? What one must characterise and
individualise is the coexistence of these dispersed and heterogeneous
statements; the system that governs their division, the degree to which they
depend upon one another, the way in which they interlock or exclude one
another, the transformation that they undergo, and the play of their
location, arrangement, and replacement. Another direction of research,
another hypothesis: might it not be possible to establish groups of
statements, by determining the system of permanent and coherent concepts
involved? For example, does not the Classical analysis of language and
grammatical facts (from Lancelot to the end of the eighteenth century) rest
on a definite number of concepts whose content and usage had been
established once and for all: the concept of judgement defined as the
general, normative form of any sentence, the concepts of subject and
predicate regrouped under the more general category of noun, the concept of
verb used as the equivalent of that of logical copula, the concept of word
defined as the sign of a representation, etc.? In this way, one might
reconstitute the conceptual architecture of Classical grammar. But there too
one would soon come up against limitations: no sooner would one have
succeeded in describing with such elements the analyses carried out by the
Port-Royal authors than one would no doubt be forced to acknowledge the
appearance of new concepts; some of these may be derived from the first, but
the others are heterogeneous and a few even incompatible with them. The
notion of natural or inverted syntactical order, that of complement
(introduced in the eighteenth century by Beauz), may still no doubt be
integrated into the conceptual system of the Port-Royal grammar. But neither
the idea of an originally expressive value of sounds, nor that of a
primitive body of knowledge enveloped in words and conveyed in some obscure
way by them, nor that of regularity in the mutation of consonants, nor the
notion of the verb as a mere name capable of designating an action or
operation, is compatible with the group of concepts used by Lancelot or
Duclos. Must we admit therefore that grammar only appears to form a coherent
figure; and that this group of statements, analyses, descriptions,
principles and consequences, deductions that has been perpetrated under this
name for over a century is no more than a false unity? But perhaps one might
discover a discursive unity if one sought it not in the coherence of
concepts, but in their simultaneous or successive emergence, in the distance
that separates them and even in their incompatibility. One would no longer
seek an architecture of concepts sufficiently general and abstract to
embrace all others and to introduce them into the same deductive structure;
one would try to analyse the interplay of their appearances and dispersion.
Lastly, a fourth hypothesis to regroup the statements, describe their
interconnection and account for the unitary forms under which they are
presented: the identity and persistence of themes. In 'sciences' like
economics or biology, which are so controversial in character, so open to
philosophical or ethical options, so exposed in certain cases to political
manipulation, it is legitimate in the first instance to suppose that a
certain thematic is capable of linking, and animating a group of discourses,
like an organism with its own needs, its own internal force, and its own
capacity for survival. Could one not, for example, constitute as a unity
everything that has constituted the evolutionist theme from Buffon to
Darwin? A theme that in the first instance was more philosophical, closer to
cosmology than to biology; a theme that directed research from afar rather
than named, regrouped, and explained results; a theme that always
presupposed more than one was aware Of, but which, on the basis of this
fundamental choice, forcibly transformed into discursive knowledge what had
been outlined as a hypothesis or as a necessity. Could one not speak of the
Physiocratic theme in the same way? An idea that postulated, beyond all
demonstration and prior to all analysis, the natural character of the three
ground rents; which consequently presupposed the economic and political
primacy of agrarian property; which excluded all analysis of the mechanisms
of industrial production; which implied, on the other hand, the description
of the circulation of money within a state, of its distribution between
different social categories, and of the channels by which it flowed back
into production; which finally led Ricardo to consider those cases in which
this triple rent did not appear, the conditions in which it could form, and
consequently to denounce the arbitrariness of the Physiocratic theme?
But on the basis of such an attempt, one is led to make two inverse and
complementary observations. In one case, the same thematic is articulated on
the basis of two sets of concepts, two types of analysis, two perfectly
different fields of objects: in its most general formulation, the
evolutionist idea is perhaps the same in the work of Benoit de Maillet,
Borden or Diderot, and in that of Darwin; but, in fact, what makes it
possible and coherent is not at all the same thing in either case. In the
eighteenth century, the evolutionist idea is defined on the basis of a
kinship of species forming a continuum laid down at the outset (interrupted
only by natural catastrophes) or gradually built up by the passing of time.
In the nineteenth century the evolutionist theme concerns not so much the
constitution of a continuous table of species, as the description of
discontinuous groups and the analysis of the modes of interaction between an
organism whose elements are interdependent and an environment that provides
its real conditions of life. A single theme, but based on two types of
discourse. In the case of Physiocracy, on the other hands Quesnay's choice
rests exactly on the same system of concepts as the opposite opinion held by
those that might be called utilitarists. At this period the analysis of
wealth involved a relatively limited set of concepts that was accepted by
all (coinage was given the same definition; prices were given the same
explanation; and labour costs were calculated in the same way). But, on the
basis of this single set of concepts, there were two ways of explaining the
formation of value, according to whether it was analysed on the basis of
exchange, or on that of remuneration for the day's work. These two
possibilities contained within economic theory, and in the rules of its set
of concepts, resulted, on the basis of the same elements, in two different
options.It would probably be wrong therefore to seek in the existence of
these themes the principles of the individualisation of a discourse. Should
they not be sought rather in the dispersion of the points of choice that the
discourse leaves free? In the different possibilities that it opens of
reanimating already existing themes, of arousing opposed strategies, of
giving way to irreconcilable interests, of making it possible, with a
particular set of concepts, to play different games? Rather than seeking the
permanence of themes, images, and opinions through time, rather than
retracing the dialectic of their conflicts in order to individualise groups
of statements, could one not rather mark out the dispersion of the points of
choice, and define prior to any option, to any thematic preference, a field
of strategic possibilities? I am presented therefore with four attempts,
four failures - and four successive hypotheses. They must now be put to the
test. Concerning those large groups of statements with which we are so
familiar - and which we call medicine, economics, or grammar - I have asked
myself on what their unity could be based. On a full, tightly packed,
continuous, geographically well-defined field of objects? What appeared to
me were rather series full of gaps, intertwined with one another, interplays
of differences, distances, substitutions, transformations. On a definite,
normative type of statement? I found formulations of levels that were much
too different and functions that were much too heterogeneous to be linked
together and arranged in a single figure, and to simulate, from one period
to another, beyond individual Å“uvres, a sort of great uninterrupted
text. On a well-defined alphabet of notions? One is confronted with concepts
that differ in structure and in the rules governing their use, which ignore
or exclude one another, and which cannot enter the unity of a logical
architecture. On the permanence of a thematic? What one finds are rather
various strategic possibilities that permit the activation of incompatible
themes, or, again, the establishment of the same theme in different groups
of statement. Hence the idea of describing these dispersions themselves; of
discovering whether, between these elements, which are certainly not
organised as a progressively deductive structure, nor as an enormous book
that is being gradually and continuously written, nor as the uvre of a
collective subject, one cannot discern a regularity: an order in their
successive appearance, correlations in their simultaneity, assignable
positions in a common space, a reciprocal functioning, linked and
hierarchised transformations. Such an analysis would not try to isolate
small islands of coherence in order to describe their internal structure; it
would not try to suspect and to reveal latent conflicts; it would study
forms of division. Or again: instead of reconstituting chains of inference
(as one often does in the history of the sciences or of philosophy), instead
of drawing up tables of differences (as the linguists do), it would describe
systems of dispersion. Whenever one can describe, between a number of
statements, such a system of dispersion, whenever, between objects, types of
statement, concepts, or thematic choices, one can define a regularity (an
order, correlations, positions and functionings, transformations), we will
say, for the sake of convenience, that we are dealing with a discursive
formation - thus avoiding words that are already overladen with conditions
and consequences, and in any case inadequate to the task of designating such
a dispersion, such 'science' 'ideology', 'theory', or 'domain of
objectivity'. The conditions to which the elements of this division
(objects, mode of statement, concepts, thematic choices) are subjected we
shall call the rules of formation. The rules of formation are conditions of
existence (but also of coexistence, maintenance, modification, and
disappearance) in a given discursive division.
This, then, is the field to be covered; these the notions that we must put
to the test and the analyses that we must carry out. I am well aware that
the risks are considerable. For an initial probe, I made use of certain
fairly loose, but familiar, groups of statement: I have no proof that I
shall find them again at the end of the analysis, nor that I shall discover
the principle of their delimitation and individualisation; I am not sure
that the discursive formations that I shall isolate will define medicine in
its overall unity, or economics and grammar in the overall curve of their
historical destination; they may even introduce unexpected boundaries and
divisions. Similarly, I have no proof that such a description will be able
to take account of the scientificity (or non-scientificity) of the
discursive groups that I have taken as an attack point and which presented
themselves at the outset with a certain pretension to scientific
rationality; I have no proof that my analysis will not be situated at a
quite different level, constituting a description that is irreducible to
epistemology or to the history of the sciences. Moreover, at the end of such
an enterprise, one may not recover those unities that, out of methodological
rigour, one initially held in suspense: one may be compelled to dissociate
certain uvres, ignore influences and traditions, abandon definitively the
question of origin, allow the commanding presence of authors to fade into
the background; and thus everything that was thought to be proper to the
history of ideas may disappear from view. The danger, in short, is that
instead of providing a basis for what already exists, instead of going over
with bold strokes lines that have already been sketched, instead of finding
reassurance in this return and final confirmation, instead of completing the
blessed circle that announces, after innumerable stratagems and as many
nights, that all is saved, one is forced to advance beyond familiar
territory, far from the certainties to which one is accustomed, towards an
as yet uncharted land and unforeseeable conclusion. Is there not a danger
that everything that has so far protected the historian in his daily journey
and accompanied him until nightfall (the destiny of rationality and the
teleology of the sciences, the long, continuous labour of thought from
period to period, the awakening and the progress of consciousness, its
perpetual resumption of itself, the uncompleted, but uninterrupted movement
of totalisations, the return to an ever-open source, and finally the
historico-transcendental thematic) may disappear, leaving for analysis a
blank, indifferent space, lacking in both interiority and promise.
The Formation of Objects
We must now list the various directions that lie open to us, and see whether
this notion of 'rules of formation' - of which little more than a rough
sketch has so far been provided - can be given real content. Let us look
first at the formation of objects. And in order to facilitate our analysis,
let us take as an example the discourse of psychopathology from the
nineteenth century onwards - a chronological break that is easy enough to
accept in a first approach to the subject. There are enough signs to
indicate it, but let us take just two of these: the establishment at the
beginning of the century of a new mode of exclusion and confinement of the
madman in a psychiatric hospital; and the possibility of tracing certain
present-day notions back to Esquirol, Heinroth, or Pinel (paranoia can be
traced back to monomania, the intelligence quotient to the initial notion of
imbecility, general paralysis to chronic encephalitis, character neurosis to
nondelirious madness); whereas if we try to trace the development of
psychopathology beyond the nineteenth century, we soon lose our way, the
path becomes confused, and the projection of Du Laurens or even Van Swicten
on the pathology of Kraepelin or Bleuler provides no more than chance
coincidences. The objects with which psychopathology has dealt since this
break in time are very numerous, mostly very new, but also very precarious,
subject to change and, in some cases, to rapid disappearance: in addition to
motor disturbances, hallucinations, and speech disorders (which were already
regarded as manifestations of madness, although they were recognised,
delimited, described, and analysed in a different way), objects appeared
that belonged to hitherto unused registers: minor behavioural disorders,
sexual aberrations and disturbances, the phenomena of suggestion and
hypnosis, lesions of the central nervous system, deficiencies of
intellectual or motor adaptation, criminality. And on the basis of each of
these registers a variety of objects were named, circumscribed, analysed,
then rectified, re-defined, challenged, erased. Is it possible to lay down
the rule to which their appearance was subject? Is it possible to discover
according to which non-deductive system these objects could be juxtaposed
and placed in succession to form the fragmented field - showing at certain
points great gaps, at others a plethora of information - of psychopathology?
What has ruled their existence as objects of discourse?
(a) First we must map the first surfaces of their emergence: show where
these individual differences, which, according to the degrees of
rationalisation, conceptual codes, and types of theory, will be accorded the
status of disease, alienation, anomaly, dementia, neurosis or psychosis,
degeneration, etc., may emerge, and then be designated and analysed. These
surfaces of emergence are not the same for different societies, at different
periods, and in different forms of discourse. In the case of
nineteenth-century psychopathology, they were probably constituted by the
family, the immediate social group, the work situation, the religious
community (which are all normative, which are all susceptible to deviation,
which all have a margin of tolerance and a threshold beyond which exclusion
is demanded, which all have a mode of designation and a mode of rejecting
madness, which all transfer to medicine if not the responsibility for
treatment and cure, at least the burden of explanation); although organised
according to a specific mode, these surfaces of emergence were not new in
the nineteenth century. On the other hand, it was no doubt at this period
that new surfaces of appearance began to function: art with its own
normativity, sexuality (its deviations in relation to customary prohibitions
become for the first time an object of observation, description, and
analysis for psychiatric discourse), penality (whereas in previous periods
madness was carefully distinguished from criminal conduct and was regarded
as an excuse, criminality itself becomes - and subsequent to the celebrated
'homicidal monomanias' - a form of deviance more or less related to
madness). In these fields of initial differentiation, in the distances, the
discontinuities, and the thresholds that appear within it, psychiatric
discourse finds a way of limiting its domain, of defining what it is talking
about, of giving it the status of an object - and therefore of making it
manifest, nameable, and describable. (b) We must also describe the
authorities of delimitation: in the nineteenth century, medicine (as an
institution possessing its own rules, as a group of individuals constituting
the medical profession, as a body of knowledge and practice, as an authority
recognised by public opinion, the law, and government) became the major
authority in society that delimited, designated, named, and established
madness as an object; but it was not alone in this: the law and penal law in
particular (with the definitions of excuse, non-responsibility, extenuating
circumstances, and with the application of such notions as the crime
passional, heredity, danger to society), the religious authority (in so far
as it set itself up as the authority that divided the mystical from the
pathological, the spiritual from the corporeal, the supernatural from the
abnormal, and in so far as it practised the direction of conscience with a
view to understanding individuals rather than carrying out a casuistical
classification of actions and circumstances), literary and art criticism
(which in the nineteenth century treated the work less and less as an object
of taste that had to be judged, and more and more as a language that had to
be interpreted and in which the author's tricks of expression had to be
recognised). (c) Lastly, we must analyse the grids of specification: these
are the systems according to which the different 'kinds of madness' are
divided, contrasted, related, regrouped, classified, derived from one
another as objects of psychiatric discourse (in the nineteenth century,
these grids of differentiation were: the soul, as a group of hierarchised,
related, and more or less interpenetrable faculties; the body, as a
three-dimensional volume of organs linked together by networks of dependence
and communication; the life and history of individuals, as a linear
succession of phases, a tangle of traces, a group of potential
reactivations, cyclical repetitions; the interplays of neuropsychological
correlations as systems of reciprocal projections, and as a field of
circular causality). Such a description is still in itself inadequate. And
for two reasons. These planes of emergence, authorities of delimitation, or
forms of specification do not provide objects, fully formed and armed, that
the discourse of psychopathology has then merely to list, classify, name,
select, and cover with a network of words and sentences: it is not the
families - with their norms, their prohibitions, their sensitivity
thresholds - that decide who is mad, and present the 'patients' to the
psychiatrists for analysis and judgement; it is not the legal system itself
that hands over certain criminals to psychiatry, that sees paranoia beyond a
particular murder, or a neurosis behind a sexual offence. It would be quite
wrong to see discourse as a place where previously established objects are
laid one after another like words on a page. But the above enumeration is
inadequate for a second reason. it has located, one after another, several
planes of differentiation in which the objects of discourse may appear. But
what relations exist between them? Why this enumeration rather than another?
What defined and closed group does one imagine one is circumscribing in this
way? And how can one speak of a 'system of formation' if one knows only a
series of different, heterogeneous determinations, lacking attributable
links and relations? In fact, these two series of questions refer back to
the same point. In order to locate that point, let us re-examine the
previous example. In the sphere with which psychopathology dealt in the
nineteenth century, one sees the very early appearance (as early as Esquirol)
of a whole series of objects belonging to the category of delinquency:
homicide (and suicide), crimes passionels, sexual offences, certain forms of
theft, vagrancy - and then, through them, heredity, the neurogenic
environment, aggressive or self-punishing behaviour, perversions, criminal
impulses, suggestibility, etc. It would be inadequate to say that one was
dealing here with the consequences of a discovery: of the sudden discovery
by a psychiatrist of a resemblance between, criminal and pathological
behaviour, a discovery of the presence in certain delinquents of the
classical signs of alienation, or mental derangement. Such facts lie beyond
the grasp of contemporary research: indeed, the problem is how to decide
what made them possible, and how these 'discoveries' could lead to others
that took them up, rectified them, modified them, or even disproved them.
Similarly, it would be irrelevant to attribute the appearance of these new
objects to the norms of nineteenth-century bourgeois society, to a
reinforced police and penal framework, to the establishment of a new code of
criminal justice, to the introduction and use of extenuating circumstances,
to the increase in crime. No doubt, all these processes were at work; but
they could not of themselves form objects for psychiatric discourse; to
pursue the description at this level one would fall short of what one was
seeking.
If, in a particular period in the history of our society, the delinquent was
psychologised and pathologised, if criminal behaviour could give rise to a
whole series of objects of knowledge, this was because a group of particular
relations was adopted for use in psychiatric discourse. The relation between
planes of specification like penal categories and degrees of diminished
responsibility, and planes of psychological characterisation (faculties,
aptitudes, degrees of development or involution, different ways of reacting
to the environment, character types, whether acquired, innate, or
hereditary). The relation between the authority of medical decision and the
authority of judicial decision (a really complex relation since medical
decision recognises absolutely the authority of the judiciary to define
crime, to determine the circumstances in which it is committed, and the
punishment that it deserves; but reserves the right to analyse its origin
and to determine the degree of responsibility involved). The relation
between the filter formed by judicial interrogation, police information,
investigation, and the whole machinery of judicial information, and the
filter formed by the medical questionnaire, clinical examinations, the
search for antecedents, and biographical accounts. The relation between the
family, sexual and penal norms of the behaviour of individuals, and the
table of pathological symptoms and diseases of which they are the signs. The
relation between therapeutic confinement in hospital (with its own
thresholds, its criteria of cure, its way of distinguishing the normal from
the pathological) and punitive confinement in prison (with its system of
punishment and pedagogy, its criteria of good conduct, improvement, and
freedom). These are the relations that, operating in psychiatric discourse,
have made possible the formation of a whole group of various objects.
Let us generalise: in the nineteenth century, psychiatric discourse is
characterised not by privileged objects, but by the way in which it forms
objects that are in fact highly dispersed. This formation is made possible
by a group of relations established between authorities of emergence,
delimitation, and specification. One might say, then, that a discursive
formation is defined (as far as its objects are concerned, at least) if one
can establish such a group; if one can show how any particular object of
discourse finds in it its place and law of emergence; if one can show that
it may give birth simultaneously or successively to mutually exclusive
objects, without having to modify itself. Hence a certain number of remarks
and consequences.
1. The conditions necessary for the appearance of an object of discourse,
the historical conditions required if one is to 'say anything' about it, and
if several people are to say different things about it, the conditions
necessary if it is to exist in relation to other objects, if it is to
establish with them relations of resemblance, proximity, distance,
difference, transformation - as we can see, these conditions are many and
imposing. Which means that one cannot speak of anything at any time; it is
not easy to say something new; it is not enough for us to open our eyes, to
pay attention, or to be aware, for new objects suddenly to light up and
emerge out of the ground. But this difficulty is not only a negative one; it
must not be attached to some obstacle whose power appears to be,
exclusively, to blind, to hinder, to prevent discovery, to conceal the
purity of the evidence or the dumb obstinacy of the things themselves; the
object does not await in limbo the order that will free it and enable it to
become embodied in a visible and prolix objectivity; it does not pre-exist
itself, held back by some obstacle at the first edges of light. It exists
under the positive conditions of a complex group of relations.
2. These relations are established between institutions, economic and social
processes, behavioural patterns, systems of norms, techniques, types of
classification, modes of characterisation; and these relations are not
present in the object; t is not they that are deployed when the object is
being analysed; they do not indicate the web, the immanent rationality, that
'deal nervure that reappears totally or in part when one conceives of the
object in the truth of its concept. They do not define its internal
constitution, but what enables it to appear, to juxtapose itself with other
objects, to situate itself in relation to them, to define its difference,
its irreducibility, and even perhaps its heterogeneity, in short, to be
placed in a field of exteriority.
3. These relations must be distinguished first from what we might call
primary relations, and which, independently of all discourse or all object
of discourse, may be described between institutions, techniques, social
forms, etc. After all, we know very well that relations existed between the
bourgeois family and the functioning of judicial authorities and categories
in the nineteenth century that can be analysed in their own right. They
cannot always be superposed upon the relations that go to form objects: the
relations of dependence that may be assigned to this primary level are not
necessarily expressed in the formation of relations that makes discursive
objects possible. But we must also distinguish the secondary relations that
are formulated in discourse itself. what, for example, the psychiatrists of
the nineteenth century could say about the relations between the family and
criminality does not reproduce, as we know, the interplay of real
dependencies; but neither does it reproduce the interplay of relations that
make possible and sustain the objects of psychiatric discourse. Thus a space
unfolds articulated with possible discourses: a system of real or primary
relations, a system of reflexive or secondary relations, and a system t of
relations that might properly be called discursive. The problem is to reveal
the specificity of these discursive relations, and their interplay with the
other two kinds.
4. Discursive relations are not, as we can see, internal to discourse: they
do not connect concepts or words with one another; they do not establish a
deductive or rhetorical structure between propositions or sentences. Yet
they are not relations exterior to discourse, relations that might limit it,
or impose certain forms upon it, or force it, in certain circumstances, to
state certain things. They are, in a sense, at the limit of discourse: they
offer it objects of which it can speak, or rather (for this image of
offering presupposes that objects are formed independently of discourse),
they determine the group of relations that discourse must establish in order
to speak of this or that object, in order to deal with them, name them,
analyse them, classify them, explain them, etc. These relations characterise
not the language (langue) used by discourse, nor the circumstances in which
it is deployed, but discourse itself as a practice.
We can now complete the analysis and see to what extent it fulfils, and to
what extent it modifies, the initial project. Taking those group figures
which, in an insistent but confused way, presented themselves as psychology,
economics, grammar, medicine, we asked on what kind of unity they could be
based: were they simply a reconstruction after the event, based on
particular works, successive theories, notions and themes some of which had
been abandoned, others maintained by tradition, and again others fated to
fall into oblivion only to be revived at a later date? Were they simply a
series of linked enterprises? We sought the unity of discourse in the
objects themselves, in their distribution, in the interplay of their
differences, in their proximity or distance - in short, in what is given to
the speaking subject; and, in the end, we are sent back to a setting-up of
relations that characterises discursive practice itself; and what we
discover is neither a configuration, nor a form, but a group of rules that
are immanent in a practice, and define it in its specificity. We also used,
as a point of reference, a unity like psychopathology: if we had wanted to
provide it with a date of birth and precise limits, it would no doubt have
been necessary to discover when the word was first used, to what kind of
analysis it could be applied, and how it achieved its separation from
neurology on the one hand and psychology on the other. What has emerged is a
unity of another type, which does not appear to have the same dates, or the
same surface, or the same articulations, but which may take account of a
group of objects for which the term psychopathology was merely a reflexive,
secondary, classificatory rubric. Psychopathology finally emerged as a
discipline in a constant state of renewal, subject to constant discoveries,
criticisms, and corrected errors; the system of formation that we have
defined remains stable. But let there be no misunderstanding: it is not the
objects that remain constant, nor the domain that they form; it is not even
their point of emergence or their mode of characterisation; but the relation
between the surfaces on which they appear, on which they can be delimited,
on which they can be analysed and specified. In the descriptions for which I
have attempted to provide a theory, there can be no question of interpreting
discourse with a view to writing a history of the referent. In the example
chosen, we are not trying to find out who was mad at a particular period, or
in what his madness consisted, or whether his disturbances were identical
with those known to us today. We are not asking ourselves whether witches
were unrecognised and persecuted madmen and madwomen, or whether, at a
different period, a mystical or aesthetic experience was not unduly
medicalised. We are not trying to reconstitute what madness itself might be,
in the form in which it first presented itself to some primitive,
fundamental, deaf, scarcely articulated' experience, and in the form in
which it was later organised (translated, deformed, travestied, perhaps even
repressed) by discourses, and the oblique, often twisted play of their
operations. Such a history of the referent is no doubt possible; and I have
no wish at the outset to exclude any effort to uncover and free these 'prediscursive'
experiences from the tyranny of the text. But what we are concerned with
here is not to neutralise discourse, to make it the sign of something else,
and to pierce through its density in order to reach what remains silently
anterior to it, but on the contrary to maintain it in its consistency, to
make it emerge in its own complexity. What, in short, we wish to do is to
dispense with 'things'. To 'depresentify' them. To conjure up their rich,
heavy, immediate plenitude, which we usually regard as the primitive law of
a discourse that has become divorced from it through error, oblivion,
illusion, ignorance, or the inertia of beliefs and traditions, or even the
perhaps unconscious desire not to see and not to speak. To substitute for
the enigmatic treasure of 'things' anterior to discourse, the regular
formation of objects that emerge only in discourse. To define these objects
without reference to the ground, the foundation of things, but by relating
them to the body of rules that enable them to form as objects of a discourse
and thus constitute the conditions of their historical appearance. To write
a history of discursive objects that does not plunge them into the common
depth of a primal soil, but deploys the nexus of regularities that govern
their dispersion.However, to suppress the stage of 'things themselves' is
not necessarily to return to the linguistic analysis of meaning. When one
describes the formation of the objects of a discourse, one tries to locate
the relations that characterise a discursive practice, one determines
neither a lexical organisation, nor the scansions of a semantic field: one
does not question the meaning given at a particular period to such words as
'melancholia' or madness without delirium', nor the opposition of content
between psychosis' and 'neurosis'. Not, I repeat, that such analyses are
regarded as illegitimate or impossible; but they are not relevant when we
are trying to discover, for example, how criminality could become an object
of medical expertise, or sexual deviation a possible object of psychiatric
discourse. The analysis of lexical contents defines either the elements of
meaning at the disposal of speaking subjects in a given period, or the
semantic structure that appears on the surface of a discourse that has
already been spoken; it does not concern discursive practice as a place in
which a tangled plurality - at once superposed and incomplete - of objects
is formed and deformed, appears and disappears. The sagacity of the
commentators is not mistaken: from the kind of analysis that I have
undertaken, words are as deliberately absent as things themselves; any
description of a vocabulary is as lacking as any reference to the living
plenitude of experience. We shall not return to the state anterior to
discourse - in which nothing has yet been said, and in which things are only
just beginning to emerge out of the grey light; and we shall not pass beyond
discourse in order to rediscover the forms that it has created and left
behind it; we shall remain, or try to remain, at the level of discourse
itself. Since it is sometimes necessary to dot the 'i's of even the most
obvious absences, I will say that in all these searches, in which I have
still progressed so little, I would like to show that 'discourses', in the
form in which they can be heard or read, are not, as one might expect, a
mere intersection of things and words: an obscure web of things, and a
manifest, visible, Coloured chain of words; I would like to show that
discourse is not a slender surface of contact, or confrontation, between a
reality and a language (langue), the intrication of a lexicon and an
experience; I would like to show with precise examples that in analysing
discourses themselves, one sees the loosening of the embrace, apparently so
tight, of words and things, and the emergence of a group of rules proper to
discursive practice. These rules define not the dumb existence of a reality,
nor the canonical use of a vocabulary, but the ordering of objects. 'Words
and things' is the entirely serious title of a problem; it is the ironic
title of a work that modifies its own form, displaces its own data, and
reveals, at the end of the day, a quite different task. A task that consists
of not - of no longer treating discourses as groups of signs (signifying
elements referring to contents or representations) but as practices that
systematically form the objects of which they speak. Of course, discourses
are composed of signs; but what they do is more than use these signs to
designate things. It is this more that renders them irreducible to the
language (langue) and to speech. it is this 'more' that we must reveal and
describe. |