
Faculty House, 64 Morningside Drive
Affect Studies Seminar
Literary Theory University Seminar, Columbia’s Department of French, and Columbia’s Maison Française, Institute for Comparative Literature and Society (ICLS)
Pre-registration is required and more important than ever this year to ensure security access to Columbia’s campus for all participants. Please RSVP here.
Please see the materials Monique David-Ménard has shared in preparation for the discussion here.
In 1842, Karl Marx denounced a new law prohibiting the poor from pilfering fallen wood in the forests of the Rhineland. He saw in this apparently local case a major transformation of modern societies. By identifying which new anthropology serves as the basis for the legal invention of property rights, which make things face the wills of owners, Marx affirms a strange proximity between human beings and inanimate things. On the side of the legislators, to prohibit ‘poverty’ from collecting brushwood for heating and to price this wood to make the poor pay for it, means to adore ‘wooden idols’; it amounts to a primitive religion, which Marx will later call fetishism. For the poor, collecting fallen wood means, by law, to identify with a new form of social and political exclusion. Their identification with the dead twigs is much more than a metaphor as it is the matter of an animist experience. It is a paradoxical animism, an animism of the inanimate. This is why Marx compares the savageness of the nobles and the bourgeois to that of the Cubans colonized by the Spaniards in the sixteenth century.
If all societies are animistic, is the modern animism invented by property rights worse than that of non-modern societies, and in any case more unconscious of itself? This talk will compare Marx’s diagnosis with Marilyn Strathern’s affirmation that ‘property is our myth’.
Speakers:
Monique David-Ménard has a double career, as a professor of philosophy and a practicing psychoanalyst. As the Director of the Centre d’études du vivant (2005-2011), she established the field of research “Gender and Sexualities” at the University Paris-Diderot/Paris 7. She has been invited to teach at universities worldwide: Ruhr University Bochum, Diego Portalès, Santiago de Chile, Universitad de Chile, Universitad de Sao Paulo, UNAM, Mexico, as well as Columbia University. As a psychoanalyst, she has been a member of the Société de Psychanalyse Freudienne since its foundation in 1994. She is also a co-founder of the ISPP (International Society for Psychoanalysis and Philosophy) and a member of the International Network of Women Philosophers (UNESCO).
Marcus Coelen (respondent) teaches comparative literature at the Ludwig-Maximilian University of Munich and is a practicing psychoanalyst. He has taught psychoanalytic and literary theory at Columbia University, Université Paris Cité, Tel Aviv University and elsewhere. He translated, edited and commented extensively on authors such as Maurice Blanchot and Georges Bataille.
Image credit © Claudia Peppel