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Don Boyd's avatar

Profound and illuminating Hanif. Thank you. There is a great story about Becket’s first encounter with Joyce in Paris. Hours of silence, “nothing to say”! Apocryphal possibly. Thrilled you are ‘home’. Love, Don

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ken harrow's avatar

Very rich reflections. At one point you came very close to Lacan, in ways tht Judith Butler has done as well. That is when you spoke of our internal censor; you can say, internalized censor. More specifically for lacan and butler, and freud and nietzsche for that matter, it is the father—or what Lacan calls the Name of the Father, the figure who plays that role of telling us no and punishing us for violating his rules…. That voice, internalized, punishes us. We identify with it, in order to defeat its efforts to silence us, so that it speaks, through us, through our words, through our mouths. It speaks and we speak it, and, eventually, crucially, we have identified with it, the one we both love and want to be, and hate and revolt against. It isn’t too much to say that all our words are made up of this love identification and hate revolt relationship, all our words. You kept dancing around that point hanif, at times pushing out that Name of the Father onto kafka’s authorities or whatever authority in govt works over our speech, and at times you danced, as always, on the romantic fence of the rebel. But finally, pops, it is there in you, you the father dictating his words to his son, or wife, who is also speaking that double speak we can recognize when you talk about your love for your own father, his own frustrated career as writer, and your own need to be the rebel. The question of where society comes into this picture is answered when we realize that language itself, the words we absorb and change each time we speak, are both their words and our own. That’s we can also see how that father is much bigger than our own as well. (And by father, Name of the Father, it is just the role that is a question, a role a mother often plays as well as the biological father).

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