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Probing Pictures: Carol Armstrong on Georges Didi-Huberman.


Invention of Hysteria: Charcot and the Photographic Iconography of the Salpetriere, by Georges Didi-Huberman, trans. Alisa Hartz. Cambridge, MA: MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology  Press. 385 pages. $35.

Two questions had been put to me as I set about reading Invention of Hysteria: Charcot and the Photographic Iconography of the Salpetriere in translation. (It was published in French twenty-one years ago.) Why did it take so long for Georges Didi-Huberman's book to appear in English? And why had it not been more important to the relatively new discipline of the history of photography in its Anglo-American incarnation? (Or, more positively, what had its importance been?) Rather than answer those "why" questions directly, I thought I would pursue briefly the theme of translation and then look more at length at Invention of Hysteria as a book about photography as much as hysteria, such that its "photographic iconography" portion would be just as important as the headlined part of the title; such that everything said about hysteria and its invention could be translated into a statement about photography and its spread as a medium of documentation, as the modern provider of iconographies.

The issue of translation is in fact twofold. Perhaps texts like Invention of Hysteria should remain in French. Deconstructionist formulations abound in this book which flow with relative fluidity in French but read peculiarly in English. English, with its immense, polyglot pol·y·glot  
adj.
Speaking, writing, written in, or composed of several languages.

n.
1. A person having a speaking, reading, or writing knowledge of several languages.

2.
 vocabulary and stress on the meanings of individual words--the relation between word and thing as much as between word and word--is simply less suited than French to that kind of play. In English, linguistic sophistication so·phis·ti·cate  
v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates

v.tr.
1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly.

2.
 gives way to ludic lu·dic  
adj.
Of or relating to play or playfulness: "Fiction . . . now makes [language]
 awkwardness, poststructure to a kind of hysteria, even, in which language wanders, contorts itself, grimaces irrationally, sticks its tongue out, and makes itself up. Perhaps such a text cannot even be seen to be about photography in English, according to the dominant Anglo-American sense of the photograph as datum rather than a particular kind of sign, an aesthetic experience rather than a semiotics semiotics or semiology, discipline deriving from the American logician C. S. Peirce and the French linguist Ferdinand de Saussure. It has come to mean generally the study of any cultural product (e.g., a text) as a formal system of signs. , the contested object of art history rather than of literary criticism.

Which brings us to another matter of translation: how to translate a book about hysteria into one about photography. For Invention of Hysteria is much more obviously about hysteria than about photography. Its claims about hysteria--that it was an anxious misogynist mi·sog·y·nist  
n.
One who hates women.

adj.
Of or characterized by a hatred of women.

Noun 1. misogynist - a misanthrope who dislikes women in particular
woman hater
 concoction; that it construed the female subject as a fundamentally pathological subject; that it did violence to the subjects that it created, objectified, and spectacularized; that as such it gave birth to Freud, the discipline of psychoanalysis, the power of the analyst, and the topic of the unconscious, out of the very regime of positivist empiricism empiricism (ĕmpĭr`ĭsĭzəm) [Gr.,=experience], philosophical doctrine that all knowledge is derived from experience. For most empiricists, experience includes inner experience—reflection upon the mind and its  and experimentalism that the unconscious subverts and psychoanalysis inverts--are important for the history of psychology, psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic criticism, and feminism. It is as such that the book has been influential. At most, Invention of Hysteria shares some of its topical content with later classics of photography criticism such as Allan Sekula's "The Body and the Archive" of 1986. But Invention of Hysteria is not itself such a classic of new photography criticism.

Nevertheless, Invention of Hysteria is about photography, in a roundabout, subterranean way. Its view of the photograph is eminently Barthesian (which is to say Gallic, not Anglophone): the photographic punctum punctum /punc·tum/ (pungk´tum) pl. punc´ta   [L.] a point or small spot.

punctum cae´cum  blind spot.

punctum lacrima´le  lacrimal point.
, the future anterior tense of the photograph, the uncanny irruption ir·rup·tion
n.
The act or process of breaking through to a surface.
 of the unconscious in the photograph, the stress on the pose, the facies facies /fa·ci·es/ (fa´she-ez) pl. fa´cies   [L.]
1. the face.

2. surface; the outer aspect of a body part or organ.

3. expression (1).
, and the theatricality of photography, the emphasis on the photograph's indexically In`dex´ic`al`ly

adv. 1. In the manner of an index.
 based power of certification and at the same time its illegibility, even the feminization feminization /fem·i·ni·za·tion/ (fem?i-ni-za´shun)
1. the normal development of primary and secondary sex characters in females.

2. the induction or development of female secondary sex characters in the male.
 of the photograph under the sign of the unheimlich--all of these are concepts from Barthes's Camera Lucida (1980), published just two years before Invention of Hysteria. What Invention of Hysteria gives us is the photographic equivalent of Freud's Dora: the "case" of Augustine, the prima donna of the Salpetriere. And the case of Augustine is emblematic, not only of the photogenic photogenic /pho·to·gen·ic/ (-jen´ik)
1. produced by light, as photogenic epilepsy.

2. producing or emitting light.


pho·to·gen·ic
adj.
1.
 nature of hysteria, as Charcot directed it, but also of Didi-Huberman's theory of the hysterical photograph, which extends Barthes's photographic puncture to cover the umbilical ties between the femininity of hysteria and what we might call the hysterium (the dark womb?) of photography.

In Didi-Huberman's analysis the hysterical female body that Charcot produced with the help of Augustine and her fellow female patients at the Hopital de la Salpetriere was a photogenic version of the old conception of the nomadic uterus--the womb that wandered about the body was understood to be the cause of what was considered a specifically female malady--from which the word "hysteria" derives. That hysteria--that origin of hysteria--was invisible; Charcot's hysteria was written on the face and body, where it could be the object of the positivist experiment. Like Duchenne de Boulogne's 1860s experiments with "expressions induced with electricity" (cited in Invention of Hysteria), in which the apparatus of experimentation is often frankly visible in the photographs that render those expressions, the "photographic iconography" of the Salpetriere consists of one experiment after another in the induction of visible states of hysteria for the purposes of being watched and photographed. Sometimes the experimental apparatus is visible in the photographs, sometimes not--as, for example, when tongs tongs

long-handled, about 3 feet, shaped like pincers with knobs on the ends of the grasping blades. Applied by standing behind the subject in a confined space and closing the jaws to grasp the animal's head just below the ears.
 were inserted into Augustine and her inmates to pinch, twist, and torture the uterus, thus reproducing the rape that may have been the origin of her trauma.

But whether the apparatus is visible or not, the photograph itself is a fundamental part of the experiment: The camera is the machinery of the experiment; the prostituted body of Augustine, its subject; and the photographs, its results--"photographs induced with hysteria," which in turn had been induced through one method or another. (The bodies of the hysterical women who put themselves on show were often all that was needed for the experiment to take place; their bodies were the equipment of experimentation, both its object and its device, the central feature of the whole contraption. As ever in the world of positive science, pathology was a form of experiment produced in the laboratory of Nature, aided and abetted by human artifice, while the experiment was a form of induced pathology into which there was built considerable indeterminacy in·de·ter·mi·na·cy  
n.
The state or quality of being indeterminate.

Noun 1. indeterminacy - the quality of being vague and poorly defined
indefiniteness, indefinity, indeterminateness, indetermination
 as to whether Nature or man had done the most inducing and where the line between them fell. And when positivism began to turn its eye inward, inverting its own project, no pathology was more suited to its purposes than that of the female subject, as the birth of psychoanalysis out of positivism and the later history of the movement prove.)

Photography was conceived out of the very regime of positivist induction and inductive experimentation that concocted Charcot's photogenic hysteria: together they were the spectacularly functional property of that regime. And nothing demonstrates this better than the photographic inferno of the Salpetriere, in which the positivist episteme reached its hellish apogee. But there is more to it than that; in Invention of Hysteria photography is more than a mere "iconography"--more than an archive of documents, more than the vast image bank that it has become, more than a record of a prior event, transparent to and determined by that event. (There is much to suggest, in fact, that the opposite was true--that the photographs helped determine the event, as they almost always do in "documentary" situations.) The chapter titled "Attacks and Exposures" in particular points to the two-way equation between hysteria and photography at work, for it suggests that the "attack" was already a kind of "exposure," while the "exposure" was always a kind of "attack."

The following are some of the descriptors of the hysterical "attack" that may be transferred to the photographic "exposure" and vice versa. Each convulsion convulsion, sudden, violent, involuntary contraction of the muscles of the body, often accompanied by loss of consciousness. It is not known what causes the abnormal impulses from the brain that result in convulsive seizures, since the disturbance may arise in normal  of the hysterical body, face, limb, and/or entire frame made a tableau, a kind of living sculpture, in which the subject was simultaneously hypercontracted and cataleptic cat·a·lep·sy  
n. pl. cat·a·lep·sies
A condition characterized by lack of response to external stimuli and by muscular rigidity, so that the limbs remain in whatever position they are placed.
, ultramobile and immobilized: a photograph before it was photographed, in short. Like the "automatic writing" of the photograph, it was a body under the sway of its soma, a body that caricatured its own automatisms. Like the "little death" of the photographic pose, the hysterical body was the delayed, scandalous yield of trauma and frozen, recurring memory. As the lens frames and crops, so this body isolated its own parts and details by muscular acts of distension dis·ten·tion also dis·ten·sion  
n.
The act of distending or the state of being distended.



[Middle English distensioun, from Old French, from Latin
 and contraction that made it into a series of broken instants and fetishized fragments. It came in and out of focus. It was an imprint, a specter of the past in the present, and a ghostly emission; like an emulsion its effluvia could be stimulated at will. It was a trigger mechanism; indeed it was an interior--a camera--that could be triggered to exteriorize exteriorize /ex·te·ri·or·ize/ (ek-ster´e-ah-riz)
1. to form a correct mental reference of the image of an object seen.

2. in psychiatry, to turn one's interest outward.

3.
 itself in images.

At once passive and active, the hysterical body was controlled by an operator who understood how to force the unconscious to make its appearance. Demonic and demonized, it was inhabited by forces outside itself that possessed it in grimaces and contortions that proved the brute physicality of its spirit. It was a body that exposed itself; it was the object of extreme scopophilia scopophilia /sco·po·phil·ia/ (sko?po-fil´e-ah) usually, voyeurism, but it is sometimes divided into active and passive forms, active s. being voyeurism and passive s. being exhibitionism. , of scopophilic extremism. It was not beautiful--far from it--but it was a kind of art, at once theatrical and pictorial; indeed, it was the other side of beauty. And it was indexical--the hysterical body was all trace and reflex, cause and effect. These are all things that could be said of the photograph too, though not of beautiful photography, not of canonized can·on·ize  
tr.v. can·on·ized, can·on·iz·ing, can·on·iz·es
1. To declare (a deceased person) to be a saint and entitled to be fully honored as such.

2. To include in the biblical canon.

3.
 photography, and not of main stream "documentary" photography either. More than iconography then, the hysterical photographs of the Salpetriere suggest an alternative ontology ontology: see metaphysics.
ontology

Theory of being as such. It was originally called “first philosophy” by Aristotle. In the 18th century Christian Wolff contrasted ontology, or general metaphysics, with special metaphysical theories
 of the photograph, an ontology of the bad photograph. (For it is striking that the Salpetriere photographs are all bad photographs: not only ugly and ungainly, but grainy, blurred, over- and underexposed un·der·ex·pose  
tr.v. un·der·ex·posed, un·der·ex·pos·ing, un·der·ex·pos·es
1. To expose (film) to light for too short a time or to light or radiation insufficient to produce normal image contrast.

2.
, and badly reproduced, badly controlled in short.)

This bad photography is the photography that, like positivism itself, gives rise to its surrealist alter ego; the "case" of Augustine represents photography's weird sister as much as the "invention of hysteria." But fascinating as it is, this is no more a photography fit to be canonized or mainstreamed than Invention of Hysteria is fit to be Anglicized. Like Camera Lucida, which is much more directly about photography, it addresses the wild-card aspects of the photograph. Invention of Hysteria seeks to show how its early scientific users tried to make a studium out of photography's puncture, a study of its demon and its delirium delirium

Condition of disorientation, confused thinking, and rapid alternation between mental states. The patient is restless, cannot concentrate, and undergoes emotional changes (e.g., anxiety, apathy, euphoria), sometimes with hallucinations.
, in the delirious face and form of the female demoniac de·mo·ni·ac   also de·mo·ni·a·cal
adj.
1. Possessed, produced, or influenced by a demon: demoniac creatures.

2.
. But as Barthes himself put it, this photography is the shipwreck of philosophy, the undoing of all ontology, and certainly it is too eccentric to be of much use to the history of photography per se. It does offer some lessons worth learning again about such putative things as the transparency of the photograph, the a posteriori status of the document, and the disinterestedness of the scientist and the document maker. And assuming that the relations discovered in it between hysteria and photography are more than wordplay, perhaps what it offers that is of some use vis-a-vis photography and the way we write about it is the introduction of fundamental doubts about the enterprise of the history of photography as such, if that history is unable to accommodate the most peculiar aspects of the medium it seeks to historicize his·tor·i·cize  
v. his·tor·i·cized, his·tor·i·ciz·ing, his·tor·i·ciz·es

v.tr.
To make or make appear historical.

v.intr.
To use historical details or materials.
 and canonize can·on·ize  
tr.v. can·on·ized, can·on·iz·ing, can·on·iz·es
1. To declare (a deceased person) to be a saint and entitled to be fully honored as such.

2. To include in the biblical canon.

3.
.

At the same time, the legitimate fascination with those particular aspects of the medium deserves to be more directly stated than it is in Invention of Hysteria, and detached from the fashionable surface topicality of hysteria, which in Didi-Huberman's book meets with a queasy-making mixture of moral superiority and the very same prurient pru·ri·ent  
adj.
1. Inordinately interested in matters of sex; lascivious.

2.
a. Characterized by an inordinate interest in sex: prurient thoughts.

b.
 enchantment that seems to have infected Charcot and his prepsychoanalytic brethren, and that passes itself on to any like-minded reader of Invention of Hysteria. (I myself fell prey to it.) The hysterium of photography: That is a metaphor, and one worth thinking about. The photogenic hysteria of Augustine: That was a real rape forced upon her weekly for a good long period of time. Perhaps we should not confuse the two, after all.

Carol Armstrong is Doris Stevens Professor in Women's Studies at Princeton University.
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Title Annotation:Invention of Hysteria: Charcot and the Photographic Iconography of the Salpetriere
Author:Armstrong, Carol
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Sep 1, 2003
Words:2021
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