The Death Drive: A Contemporary Introduction

Author(s) : Rossella Valdre

The Death Drive: A Contemporary Introduction

Book Details

  • Publisher : Routledge
  • Published : 2024
  • Cover : Paperback
  • Pages : 120
  • Category :
    Psychoanalysis
  • Catalogue No : 97779
  • ISBN 13 : 9781032687414
  • ISBN 10 : 103268741X

Reviews and Endorsements

Dr. Rossella Valdrè’s introductory book on the complex and difficult topic of the death drive is clear, easy to read, and rigorous.
Among psychoanalysts there is no agreement on this Freudian concept, which has been remarkably successful in the field of culture, but has not convinced a significant portion of the psychoanalytic profession and has encountered outright rejection from another portion.
Freud came to hypothesise a self-destructive drive driven by two needs: to explain the failures of analytic work stalled by the tendency of various patients to repeat the traumatic experience, their steely determination to perpetuate their malaise; to make clear the human destructiveness so dramatically manifested in World War I.
With his theorisation of the death drive, Freud laid the cornerstone of his model of the homeostatic functioning of human mind-body matter: the tendency to return to a previous state of tension (to the constant level of minimal tension - the constancy principle, or to the total absence of tension - the nirvana principle). This model forms the basis of every human being’s defensive structure.
Criticism of Freud primarily concerns the difficulty of applying the concept of the death drive in the clinical field without a certain degree of schematisation. Repetition compulsion does not require a biological foundation of its interpretive value. The same is true of the economic discourse on masochism and in general the quantitative, defensive functioning of the psyche that obeys the logic of need. Structural resistance to transformation in analysis is best explained by the rejection of the feminine.
The death drive seems rooted, from the very French analysts who most support its metapsychological importance, in the psychic impoverishment produced by its contraction that the destruction of the tie with reality causes: the “desire not to desire” (Aulagnier), the “work of the negative” that unties instead of tying representations together (Green).
In her book Valdrè gives due importance to masochism. The link made by Lacan between masochism/death drive and malign enjoyment is well known: the pursuit of unlimited pleasure, the deadly, perpetual hunger for pleasure. In the wake of his hypotheses, the idea of the sexualization of the death drive took hold in France.
Malign enjoyment has nothing to do with true enjoyment. Its presence stems from the dissolution of sexual difference that greatly hinders the unfurling and satisfaction of desire. Frustration creates tension that must be discharged. Desire is thus perverted into need. A vicious circle is created in which tension is produced and discharged. Because true fulfilment is not achieved, tension is recreated and is discharged again. Tension is constantly being produced, discharged, recreated, and discharged anew. The eclipse of desire and its perversion into need have a depressive effect. On the one hand, one desperately tries to keep alive desire perverted into need and on the other hand, one tries to feel alive instead of being alive and enjoying it, and remains in a loop of alternating between arousing and calming devices that mimic orgasm. Malign enjoyment is the fate of the frigid subject.
One might think that deadly masochism has its unconscious core in the identification with death, where sadism and masochism coincide, in wanting to be death, in the dual meaning of the omnipotent triumph over everything and the zero degree of tensions, the state of absolute Nirvana.
The death drive captures a condition of the human being, regardless of its roots in biology, which is more immediately tied to masochism than sadism. The psychic apparatus subjected to the “work of the negative,” which operates through the reduction of the complexity of feeling, thinking and being into patterns of mechanical, performative action, finds in the paranoid, aggressive setting not only a containment of depression (caused by the contraction of the relationship with reality) but also an effective way to discharge and defensively compact the organism. Destructive action is exquisitely self-destructive (destroying the other to destroy one’s own suffering humanity) and sadistic excitement is inhabited at its core by masochistic excitement.
Valdrè approaches these difficult topics, so important for understanding human beings, with expertise, intelligence, and curiosity. Her book is very useful for any reader interested in psychoanalysis.
Sarantis Thanopulos, President of the Italian Psychoanalytical Society and Training Analyst

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