The word "ideology" was
originally coined by Count Destutt de Tracy, a French rationalist philosopher
of the late eighteenth century to define a "science of ideas." For de
Tracy, ideology formed "a part of zoology" (i.e. biology) The concept
of ideology was developed in Marxian thought as a term through which to
articulate the relation between the realm ofculture and the realm of political
economy. For Marx, the proper method for analyzing concepts is one which
retraces the steps from the abstract
concept back to its concreteorigin
"If in all ideology men and their
relations appear upside-down as in a camera obscura, this phenomenon arises
just as much from their historical life-processes as the inversion of objects
on the retina does from their physical life-processes." Karl Marx, The
German Ideology. note the analogy between physiology in perception and social
life in thought, both function as the concrete origins, if not as determinants
In Marxist theory, every society is
crucially defined by its class structure, by the specific relation between the
dominant class and the producing or working class, or proletariat. Societies
use the apparatuses of ideology to reconcile its social subjects to their
structure, using force only when ideology does not suffice. "A society is
possible in the last analysis because the individuals carry around in their
heads some sort of picture of that society." (Mannheim) -- "and their
place in it." (Kavanagh) (see hegemony ) Thus the disavowal of politics
and "ideology" in contemporary liberal culture is precisely
ideological, whose social function is to obscure the real processes that found
one's social life. As Althusser puts it, "Those who are in ideology
believe themselves by definition outside ideology...Ideology never says 'I am
ideological.'" Lenin and Philosophy, p.175
Althusser (and Lacan) define ideology as
"the representation of the subject's imaginary relationship to his or her
Real conditions of existence." (Louis Althusser, "Ideological State
Apparatuses", in Lenin and Philosophy.) "Ideology offers the social
subject a fundamental framework of assumptions that defines the parameters of
the real and the self; it constitutes what Althusser calls the social subject's
"'lived' relation to the real." (James H. Kavanagh,
"Ideology," in Critical Terms for Literary Study) For Althusser the
term Ideological State Apparatuses designates the material existence of
ideology in ideological practices, rituals, and institutions
Ideology is not simply "false
consciousness," however, nor can any society dispense with it
Henri Lefebvre aks "What is an
ideology without a space to which it refers? ...What would remain of the Church
if there were no churches?" (p.44) For Lefebvre, "Ideology per
semight well be said to consist primarily in a discourse upon social space
For Michel de Certeau, "Denial of the
specificity of the place (of production) is the very principle of
ideology." ("The Historiographical Operation") "By moving
discourse into a non-place, ideology forbids history from speacking of society
and of death -- in other words, from being history." (p69) "If
religion is one form of ideology, it is also the form of every ideology. Only
the religious illusion may found that of a perfect autonomy, characteristic of
all ideology." Sarah Kofman
Virtuality can be interpreted as ideology,
particularly in the characteristic feature of denying its material basis
"We are indebted to Pascal...for the
wonderful formula which will enable us to invert the order of the notional
schema of ideology. Pascal says, more or less: 'Kneel down, move your lips in
prayer, and you will believe.' " (Louis Althusser, "Ideology and
Ideological State Apparatuses" in Zizek, Mapping Ideology, p. 127) Slavoj
Zizek glosses this passage to say "kneel down and you shall believe you
knelt down because of your belief. ...that the 'external' ritual performatively
generates its own ideological foundation." Intro, pp 12-13
Another version of this apparent reversal
of cause and effect can be seen in descriptions of the physical expression of
emotional states. Not only is expression (such as breathing rate, tension of
the facial muscles etc.) the physical manifestation of a mental process, but
the emotion can be stimulated by the physical expression itself
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