On the Theory and History of Ideological Production promotes the existence of an âideological unconsciousâ, understood primarily as a product of social relations, not of the Ideological State Apparatus. Attention focuses upon the transition from feudalism to capitalism, as theorised by the Spanish Marxist and former student of Althusser, Juan Carlos RodrÃguez. Theorization of the âideological unconsciousâ presupposes a change of terrain from the individual/society opposition to a problematic based on the âsocial formationâ. The present text assesses RodrÃguezâs work alongside that of his contemporaries, Fredric Jameson, Noam Chomsky, Terry Eagleton, Roy Bhaskar, Slavoj Žižek, and others.
Malcolm K. Read, Ph.D. University of Wales, is Emeritus Professor of Hispanic Languages at the State University of New York. He has published monographs, translations, and many articles, including The Matrix Effect (2010) and Journeys through the Ideological Unconscious (2022).
Preface Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 In the Shadow of Althusser
â1âNegotiating the âBreakâ
â2âThe Ideological Unconscious
â3âAlthusser: the Unconsciousness of Ideology
â4âFeudal Substantialism
â5âAlthusser: Ontology, Epistemology, and Methodology
â6âThe Libidinal Unconscious
â7âAntonio Gramsci and the Case for Historicism
â8âThe Eye/I That Sees the Thing
â9âNicos Poulantzas: the Matrix Effect
2 On the Radical Historicity of Literature: Roy Bhaskar
â1âWho Walked a Crooked Mile
â2âA Hegelian Turn
â3âVisions in Exile
â4âHistory without a Subject
â5âOn the Radical Historicity of âLoveâ
â6âIdeology as âProductivityâ
â7âThe Historical Origins of the Free Subject
â8âThe Closet Althusserian
â9âMethodology versus Epistemology
â10âCritical Realism and Althusserianism
â11âConclusion
3 Ideologies of the Transition: Noam Chomsky
â1âChomsky and Huarte
â2âIdeologies of the Absolutist State
â3âRodrÃguez and the Examination
â4âThe Literal Gaze
â5âThe Letter of the Law
â6âThe Subsequent History of Animism
â7âConclusion
4 Explorations of the Political/Ideological Unconscious: Fredric Jameson
â1âFrom Marx to Althusser
â2âScience and Ideology
â3âAlthusser Reconfigured: from Kant to Hegel
â4âTheorising the Ideological Unconscious
â5âThe Political Unconscious
â6âFrom Substantialist to Animist Tears
â7âPostmodernism and the End of Ideology
â8âThe Melodrama of Tears: Jorge Isaacsâs âMarÃaâ
â9âConclusion
5 On Continuities and Discontinuities: Terry Eagleton
â1âServants of the Lord
â2âThe Legacy of Catholicism
â3âRadical Historicity: the Case of the Theatre
â4âThe Individual and Society
â5âTransitional Ideologies
â6âPower versus Exploitation
â7âThe âBreakâ That Never Was
â8âConclusion
6 Discourse and Ideology: Michel Foucault
â1âMaking the âBreakâ
â2âTheorising the Ideological Unconscious
â3âTheorising the Discursive Unconscious
â4âMirrors and Souls
â5âA Borgesian Interlude: the Chinese Encyclopaedia
â6âEmpowering Discursive Unconsciousness
â7âStaging the State Apparatus
â8âThe Revenge of History
7 Educating the Educators: The Critical Realists
â1âAlthusserian Unconsciousness Re-Visited
â2âExtracting the Concept
â3âCausal Dynamics
â4âReclaiming Reality
â5âLove, Money, and Marriage
â6âDeprocessualising History
â7âOn Radical Historicity
â8âBritish Marxism at Its Limits
â9âConclusion
8 Paradoxes and Exploitation: Slavoj Žižek
â1âTowards a Philosophical Anthropology
â2âThe Dog That Didnât Bark
â3âFetishism and Commodity Fetishism
â4ââStructural Causalityâ and âHomologiesâ
â5âThe âLookâ versus the âGazeâ
â6âThe Paradoxes of Democracy
â7âThe Private Eye: Traversing the Fantasy
â8âConclusion
9 The Rise of Podemos: Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe
â1âErnesto Laclau: Goodbye to All That
â2âThe State/Stage under Absolutism
â3âChantal Mouffe: Reductionism Inverted
â4âThe Eighteenth-Century Drama: from Public to Private
â5âFrom the Social to the Discursive Formation
â6âGarcÃa Lorca: the Objectivity of the Text
â7âPodemos: Life in the Media
â8âBorges Revisited
Conclusion
Bibliography Index
Of immediate interest for students of Marxism, specifically of the âstructuralâ variety; also of relevance for sociologists, political scientists, social philosophers, and literary theoreticians in general.