Deleuze Mazoch
Deleuze Mazoch
Deleuze Mazoch
Contents
1 The Language of Sade and Masoch
2 The Three Women
3 Father and Mother
4 The Art of Masoch
5 Reception
6 References
7 Further reading
The Language of Sade and Masoch
Deleuze starts off by first moving from the clinical practice of associating proper
names to diseases (Parkinson's and Roger's disease for instance). However,
sometimes it is the patient's name that denotes the illness, as in the case of
Masochism and Sadism. History of medicine, says Deleuze, can be regarded as a
history of the illness (leprosy, plague) that dies and changes over time, and a
history of the symptomatology. However, it is difficult to attribute a disease to
Sade and Masoch, but a symptomatology and signs that they describe. It is no longer
a matter of pain and sexual pleasure only but of bondage and humiliation as well.
Therefore, the project is one that moves beyond the purely clinical realm.
However, the differences in Sade and Masoch are not of complementarity but of
constituting completely different worlds. Sade uses a language of descriptions that
aim at demonstration, whereas Masoch uses the description for a higher function,
one of persuasion and education.
Reception
Ronald Bogue writes that while Deleuze addresses traditional literary questions in
Masochism: Coldness and Cruelty his primary concern is to "delineate the system of
thought that informs the corpus" of Sacher-Masoch's works. According to Bogue,
"Deleuze tries to revive the reputation of Sacher-Masoch, a celebrated and prolific
novelist of the 1870s and 1880s now remembered only as the eponymous exemplar of
masochism, by demonstrating that Sacher-Masoch is an astute psychologist and a
profound thinker whose works...articulate a perverse idealism aimed at a subversion
of the Kantian conception of law." He comments that Deleuze's study of Sacher-
Masoch is "highly suggestive from both a psychoanalytic and a critical perspective"
but that it is most significant for demonstrating how "writers can reconfigure the
relationship between literature and philosophy."[1]
The French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan described it as "undoubtedly the best text
that has ever been written" on masochism.[2]
The critic Camille Paglia expressed a favorable view of Masochism, commenting that
she "liked Gilles Deleuze's book on masochism".[3]
Historian Alison M. Moore notes that Masoch was displeased to have a psychiatric
category named after him by Richard von Krafft-Ebing, and that Deleuze conflates
this psychiatric labelling with Masoch's own view of his desire as 'super-
sensualism'.[4][5]
References
Bogue, Ronald. Deleuze and Guattari. Routledge, 1989, p. 35.
Sigler, David (2011). ""read Mr. Sacher-Masoch": The Literariness of Masochism in
the Philosophy of Jacques Lacan and Gilles Deleuze". Criticism. 53 (2): 189–212.
doi:10.1353/crt.2011.0014. ISSN 0011-1589. JSTOR 23131567.
Paglia, Camille. Vamps and Tramps: New Essays. Penguin Books, 1995, p. 232.
Alison Moore, Recovering Difference in the Deleuzian Dichotomy of Masochism-
without-Sadism. Angelaki 14 (3), November 2009, 27-43.
Alison M. Moore, Sexual Myths of Modernity: Sadism, Masochism and Historical
Teleology. Lanham: Lexington Books [Rowman & Littlefield], 2015. ISBN 978-0-7391-
3077-3
Further reading
Many psychoanalysts argue that clinicians have a lot to learn from literature. They
share the deep-rooted conviction that artists are sensitive to clinical phenomena
and that they make visible what is often overlooked by clinicians. Freud, for
example, relies on Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex and Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Half a century
later, the assumption of Freud’s literary clinic has been taken up by the French
philosopher Gilles Deleuze in his study Présentation de Sacher-Masoch. Deleuze
reads Sade’s and Sacher-Masoch’s literary novels from the same perspective as
Freud. Sade and Sacher-Masoch, Deleuze argues, are first of all great
symptomatologists. Their novels explore the sadistic and masochistic universe
thoroughly. In his essay, the author discusses Deleuze’s reading of Sade and
Sacher-Masoch. Deleuze argues that his study, whilst sharing Freud’s basic
assumptions, is a critique of his conception of sadism and masochism.