
About this episode
Ryan and Todd explore the concept of superegoic enjoyment, its origins, and its implications in society.
On this episode, Ryan and Todd return to the topic of the superego to discuss--for the first time at length--the enjoyment particular to it. Superegoic enjoyment is an idea that first appears in Freud though it is not fully developed as a concept until Lacan (briefly) and Žižek (massively). For Žižek, transgression of the written law enables the group identification with a suspension of the law. This is crucial to the superegoic enjoyment we see in, for example, the banality of breaking the speed limit and the horror of militarized police brutally suppressing a protest movement under special orders. Ryan and Todd depart from Žižek's influential and important articulation of superegoic enjoyment by offering that it is not the obscene underside of the law but rather an internalization of the Big Other's demand that is the essential characteristic of the superego's injunction to enjoy.
People in this episode
Hosts: Ryan, Todd
Topics covered
- superego
- enjoyment
- transgression
- law
- group identification
- internalization
Keywords
- superego
- enjoyment
- Freud
- Lacan
- Žižek
- transgression
- law
- protest
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