7 - The prose poem narrator
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 August 2009
Summary
HISTORICIZING BORDERLINE NARCISSISM
One of the most important differences between Lacanian and object-relations psychoanalysis, despite their common debt to the work of Melanie Klein, involves Freud's notion of Nachträglichkeit, or “deferred action.” Kernberg and other object-relations psychoanalysts tend to conceive of psychic causality as a linear determinism, whereby childhood experience determines later psychological disturbance (as when severe frustration during childhood, for example, later causes borderline narcissism in the adult). In the Lacanian view, by contrast, psychic causality is not linear, for the meaning(s) later attributed to earlier events count for more than the “events themselves” (which may turn out to be fictitious anyway, according to the Freud of “Infantile Sexuality”). Indeed, from his very earliest work on hysteria, Freud suggested that childhood events may become meaningful and psychologically effective only long after they occurred; as he put it in an essay entitled “Screen Memories”:
It may indeed be questioned whether we have any memories at all from our childhood: memories relating to our childhood may be all that we possess. Our childhood memories show us our earliest years not as they were but as they appeared at the later periods when the memories were aroused. In these periods of arousal, the childhood memories did not, as people are accustomed to say emerge; they were formed at that time.[…]
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- Baudelaire and SchizoanalysisThe Socio-Poetics of Modernism, pp. 221 - 257Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993