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Demand

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==Jacques Lacan==
==Early Work==
[[Lacan]] begins to use the term "[[demand]]" in 1958.
[[Demand]] ([[French]]: ''demande'') is a concept used by [[Jacques Lacan]] in relation to [[need]] and desire]].
In the [[seminar]] of 1956-7, [[Lacan]] argues that the '''cry''' of the '''[[helplessness|human infant]]''' -- its '''call''' (''l'appel'') to the '''[[mother]]''' -- is not merely an [[instinct|instinctual signal]] but is "inserted in a [[synchronic]] [[world]] of cries organized in a symbolic [[system]]."<ref>{{S4}} p. 182, 188</ref>
In other [[words]], the [[infant]]'s screams become organized in a [[linguistic]] [[structure]] long before the [[child]] is capable of articulating recognizable words.
==Need, Demand and Desire==It is the [[symbolic|symbolic nature]] of the infant's screams which forms the kernel of [[Jacques Lacan]] introduces the 's [[concept ]] of [[demand]] , which Lacan introduces in 1958 in the context of his [[distinction ]] between [[need]], [[demand]] and [[desire]].
==Articulation of Need==
Lacan argues that since the [[infant]] is incapable of performing the specific actions that would [[satisfy]] its [[biological]] [[need]]s, it must articulate those [[need]]s in vocal [[form]] ([[demand]]s) so that [[another]] (the [[mother]]) will perform the specific [[action]] instead.
The primary example of such a [[biological]] [[need]] is hunger, which the [[child]] articulates in a scream ([[demand]]) so that the [[mother]] will feed it.
==Demand for the Other's Love==However, because the object]] which [[Demandsatisfies]] arises only from the [[speechchild]].'s [[Demandneed]] is addressed to someone.provided by another, it takes on the added [[Demandsignificance]] is only implicit.of [[Demandbeing]] is related to a need for love, but also to desire.proof of the [[Other]]'s [[Demandlove]] does not need to be sustained by any real object.
Accordingly [[demand]] too acquires a [[double]] function: in addition to articualting a [[need]], it also becomes a [[demand]] for [[love]].
And just as the [[symbolic]] function of the [[object]] as a proof of [[love]] overshadows its [[real]] function as that which [[satisfies]] a [[need]], so too the [[symbolic]] [[dimension]] of [[demand]] (as a [[demand]] for [[love]]) eclipses its real function (as an articulation of [[need]]).
In the 1956-7 seminar, [[Object Relations]] [[Lacan]] addresses the [[call]] (''l'appel'' or ''cri'') of an [[infant]] to the [[mother]].<ref>[[Jacques Lacan|Lacan, Jacques]]. [[Object Relations]]. ''La relation d'objet et les structures freudiennes.'' p.182</ref> =Desire=[[Lacan]] argues that It is this cry is not merely an instinctual signal but "is inserted in a synchronic world of cries organised in a symbolic system."<ref>[[Jacques Lacan|Lacan, Jacques]]. [[Object Relations]]. ''La relation d'objet et les structures freudiennes.'' p.188</ref> The screams of the infant become organized in a linguistic structure long before the child is capable of articulating recognisable words.  The concept of [[demand]] is concerned with the [[symbolic double function]] of the screams of the infant. The which gives [[infantbirth]] is unable to perform the [[action]]s that would satisfy its [[biology|biological]] [[need]]s.The [[infant]] must articulate its [[biology|biological]] [[need]]s in vocal form so that the [[mother]] can peform those actions instead. For example: the [[infant]] articulates [[hungerdesire]], a [[biology|biological]] [[need]], in a scream so that since while the [[mother]] will feed it. The [[object]] which [[satisfaction|satisfies]] [[need]] (provided by another) also signifies the [[Other]]'s [[love]].  The which [[demand]] that articulates a [[biology|biological]] [[need]] becomes a [[demand]] for [[love]]. The [[symbolic function]] of the [[demand]] (as a [[demand]] for [[love]]) overshadows its real function as an articulation of [[need]].The function of [[demand]] as an articulation of [[need]] becomes overshadows by its [[symbolic function]] (as a [[demand]] for [[love]]).  The [[biology|biological]] [[need]] that [[demand]] articulates can may be [[satisfaction|satisfied]].The [[demand]] , the craving for [[love]] is insatiable.The unconditional and [[demand]] for [[loveinsatiable]] , and hence persists as a [[leftover]] even after the [[biology|biological]] [[need]]s have been [[satisfaction|satisfied]].This [[; this leftover]] constitutes [[desire]]. Demand is thus intimately linked to the human subject's initial [[helplessness]]. The [[analysand]] articulates him or herself entirely in [[speech]].The [[analysand]] occupies the position of [[helplessness]], that of the helpless infant.The psychoanalytic situation thus encourags [[regression]].Through the mediation of the demand, the whole past opens up right down to early infancy.The [[speech]] or [[discourse]] of the [[analysand]] is itself already a [[demand]].<ref>E, 254</ref> The [[analyst]] must engage with the [[demands]] of the [[analysand]]. He or she must not gratify the [[demand]]s of the [[analysand]], nor can he or she [[frustration|frustrate]] them.  In 1961, Lacan rethinks the various stages of libidinal organisation as forms of demand. The [[oral phase]] of [[development]] is constituted by a [[demand]] (made by the subject) to be fed.  The oral demand calls for an inverse response, such that the other's answer to the imperative "feed me" is "let yourself be fed." This inversion becomes a source of discord or even of destructive urges. To whom is the demand addressed? To the Other, and not the mother. It is addressed to the Other that separates the demand from a desire. And that desire, in turn, deprives the demand of its satisfaction. Thus the demand becomes a non-demand. The dream of the "beautiful butcher's wife," as reported by Freud, is a perfect example of this. What is the object of her desire to define? It is a cannibalistic object. This desire is directed towards the nourishing body, an organic unconscious object through which the demand's relation to the Other can be sexualized. This libidinization, "which is nothing but surplus," deprives the need of its gratification. The function of desire, which sustains all demand, is in turn maintained in it and thus preserved. Desire can be recognized in the field of speech by the negation with which it originates: this, and not that!The original oral relation between the mother and her child is constantly fed by a kind of hostility in which each one is convinced, at the imaginary level, of being "bawled out" by the other. Donald Winnicott (1974) emphasizes moreover that the object is so good, so exciting—that it bites. Consultations with mothers and children always show this.  The [[anal phase]] is constituted by a [[demand]] of the [[Other]].<ref>S8, 238-46, 269</ref>At the anal stage, need reigns supreme; but while demand sets out to restrain need, desire wants to expel it. The one is entrusted with satisfying it, while the other is determined to control it. In the end, this control is legitimated only by turning need into a gift expected by an other, who is always primordially the mother. The oblation of this exonerating gift is metonymic. In order to evacuate the gift of symbolic desire, the one who gives it (child, student, or citizen, for example) could well adopt the slogan "everything for the other" in reference to the one who expects it (the mother, the teacher, or an authority figure)—this is true enough in the voting booth, at any rate. Such a gift is not produced by the one who gives it: someone else is the producer, someone who is able to wait for it only as long as the giver is suffering. It is not that the gift is necessarily painful in itself; the reaction of the one who receives it is the determining factor in that respect. So that her expectations will not be in vain, the mother eroticizes her relation with the child. She makes the child a sexual partner, involved in a fantasy in which he becomes the imaginary phallic object. In the end, the child will have been forced to do the only thing it was able to do. This was how the sadomasochistic economy was described by Freud, who took the symbolic equivalence of penis, feces, and child as his starting point.   In these [[pregenital phase]]s, the [[satisfaction]] of [[demand]] eclipses [[desire]].[[Desire]] is fully constituted only in the [[genital phase]].<ref>S8, 270</ref>At the genital stage, demand seeks out a real partner. A repressed demand returns in the field of sexuality, and it will be satisfied only by a real engagement—one the subject wants to wait for, since he or she intends to bring it about. Thus the demand is based on the primacy of a sexual desire that is certainly sustained by a need, but that emphasizes a real lack in the other. Far from realizing desire, this lack constantly renews it. "The subject does not know what he desires most," either from the other or in terms of his own lack. From then on, the "something else" that originates from this lack of knowledge is related to a desire that is deceived. It is deceived if it believes itself to be lacking only the other, the missing half that is but a shadow from the past.    [[Demand]] arises when a [[lack]] in the [[Real]] becomes articulates in the [[symbolic]] medium of [[language]].[[Demand]], like [[parapraxes]] or [[slips of the tongue]], express [[unconscious]] signifying formations.[[Desire]] is leftover from the [[demand]].The [[Real]] cannot be symbolized.The leftover represents a [[loss|lost]] [[surplus]] of ''[[jouissance]]'' for the [[subject]]."Don't give me what I ask for, that's not it." The object of demand is a fantasy object, what is lacking in the unconscious Other.The function of the object is to make the demand of the subject and the demand of the Other coincide.[[Demand]], although it is tied to both the symbolic and the real, is primarily [[imaginary]], and thus most closely related to the body.in relation to oral, anal, and genital regions of the body that serve as the sources of demand.The [[symbolic function]] of the [[object]] as a proof of [[love]] overshadows its real function as that which satisfies a [[need]].     How do we recognize an obsessional neurosis? By a declared conflict between demand and desire, satisfaction and discipline, need and legitimacy, gift and exoneration. The outcome of this conflict can only be a resignation to suffering. The characteristic "it could have been worse" attitude alludes to the masochistic jouissance that the obsessional derives from it, while "You had that coming" sums up the sadistic expectation of the other, who is without doubt the father—when it comes to need, he's always too much.
==Helplessness==
[[Demand]] is thus intimately linked to the [[human]] [[subject]]'s initial [[helplessness]].
By forcing the [[analysand]] to express himself entirely in [[speech]], the [[treatment|psychoanalytic situation]] puts him back in the [[position]] of the [[helpless]] [[infant]], thus encouraging [[regression]].
<blockquote>"Through the mediation of the demand, the [[whole]] [[past]] opens up [[right]] to early infancy. [[The Subject|The subject]] has never done anything other than demand, he could not have survived otherwise, an we just follow on from there."<ref>{{E}} p. 254</ref></blockquote>
==Analysand==
However, while the [[speech]] of the [[analysand]] is itself already a [[demand]] (for a reply), this [[demand]] is underpinned by deeper [[demand]]s (to be [[cure]]d, to be revealed to himself, to become an [[analyst]]).<ref>{{E}} p. 254</ref>
==Analyst==
The question of how the [[analyst]] engages with these [[demands]] is crucial.
Certainly the [[analyst]] does not attempt to gratify the [[analysand]]'s [[demand]]s, but nor is it simply a question of [[frustration|frustrating]] [[them]].
==Development==
In 1961, [[Lacan]] rethinks the various [[stages]] of [[libidinal]] organisation as forms of [[demand]].
The [[development|oral phase]] of [[development]] is constituted by a [[demand]] (made by the [[subject]]) to be fed (which is a [[demand]] made by the [[subject]]).
In the [[development|anal stage]], on the other hand, it is not a question of the [[subject]]'s [[demand]], but the [[demand]] of the [[Other]] (the parent who disciplines the child in potty-[[training]]).<ref>{{S8}} p. 238-46, 269</ref>
In both of these [[development|pregenital stage]]s the [[satisfaction]] of [[demand]] eclipses [[desire]]; only in the [[genital stage]] does [[desire]] comes to be fully constituted.<ref>{{S8}} p. 270</ref>
==See Also==
{{See}}
* [[Analysand]]
* [[Analyst]]
||
* [[Biology]]
* [[Development]]
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* [[Desire]]
* [[Love]]
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* [[Mother]]
* [[Need]]
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* [[Other]]
* [[Speech]]
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* [[Structure]]
* [[Treatment]]
{{Also}}
==References==
<div style="font-size:11px" class="references-small">
<references/>
<ref>demand, 154-6, 209, 235, 269, 271, 273-4,278</ref><ref>'''The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis'''. Ed. J.-A. Miller. Trans. A. Sheridan. London: Hogarth Press, 1977.</ref><ref>Lacan, Jacques. (1966 [2002]).Écrits. Paris: Seuil. Écrits: A selection. (Bruce Fink, Trans.). New York: W. W. Norton.</ref><ref>Lacan, Jacques. (1991). Le Séminaire-livre VIII, le transfert (1960-61). Paris: Seuil.</refdiv>
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[[Category:Jacques Lacan]]
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