Novel concept 1 occurrence

Being-for (être pour)

ELI5

Instead of just "being," the neurotic is always "being-for" something — always reaching toward a goal or a desire that keeps moving away — and this endless reaching is itself how they stay alive and keep wanting things, even though it means they never fully arrive at simply existing.

Definition

Being-for (être pour) is Lacan's term, coined in Seminar VI, for the structural position of the neurotic subject whose very mode of existing is constitutively oriented toward something else — toward desire, toward the Other, toward an always-deferred satisfaction — rather than grounded in any self-sufficient or "pure" being. The concept captures the asymmetry between être pour (being-for, a being that is always in relation to, always angled toward an aim it cannot reach) and pour être (in order to be, or being-as-such — the full ontological presence that remains perpetually out of reach). The neurotic does not inhabit being directly; instead, being is perpetually displaced into a metonymic chain of substitutions that sustain desire precisely by deferring its satisfaction. This is not incidental but structural: the metonymy of être pour is the neurotic's symptomatic solution to the impossibility of pure being, a solution that converts the very loss of being into the engine of desire.

This concept is theoretically inseparable from the Lacanian distinction between metaphor and metonymy. Metaphor would constitute a substitution that produces a new meaning, a condensation that yields symbolic identity — the moment of "being as such." Metonymy, by contrast, perpetually slides along the signifying chain, displacing rather than anchoring. Being-for is the metonymic mode of the neurotic's existence: jouissance is not achieved in satisfaction but is sustained as a symptomatic remainder in the very movement of deferral. The subject's pour être (its "in order to be") is entirely captured within the être pour, meaning that the neurotic's striving-toward constitutes both the condition and the obstacle of its being.

Place in the corpus

Being-for (être pour) appears exclusively in jacques-lacan-seminar-6 (p. 450), within Lacan's rereading of Freud's "A Child is Being Beaten." It functions as a specification of several interlocking canonical concepts. Most directly, it is a specification of alienation: if alienation names the forced choice between being and meaning in which the subject always loses something essential, then être pour names the particular shape that loss takes in neurotic subjectivity — a being that can only exist in the mode of directedness-toward, never as self-coincident presence. The vel of alienation forecloses "pure being" as a viable option; être pour is the metonymic remainder the neurotic constructs from that foreclosure.

Being-for also extends the canonical account of desire and fantasy. Desire, as the structural gap that cannot be filled, is here given a specifically ontological register: the neurotic's desire is not merely an episodic want but a mode of being, a way of inhabiting existence as perpetual orientation-toward. The concept equally articulates the function of jouissance in neurosis: rather than achieving jouissance through satisfaction, the neurotic extracts it from the very symptomatic metonymy of être pour, sustaining enjoyment in the circuit of deferral itself. Finally, being-for resonates with demand and masochism as cross-referenced concepts: the obsessive's structural position involves sustaining the demand of the Other while perpetually deferring its satisfaction, a dynamic in which the "being-for" the Other's desire organizes the subject's entire economy of enjoyment and suffering.

Key formulations

Seminar VI · Desire and Its InterpretationJacques Lacan · 1958 (p.450)

The subject thus does not present himself as a 'pure being' [être pur]... but a 'being for' [être pour]. The ambiguity of the neurotic's position lies precisely in this metonymy, which is such that it is in this être pour that all of his pour être [in order to be] lies.

The quote is theoretically loaded because it stages the entire structural drama in a single chiasm: être pour (being-for) and pour être (in order to be / being-as-such) are mirror inversions of the same French words, and Lacan's point is precisely that the neurotic cannot escape this loop — the "in order to be" is not a destination that lies beyond the "being-for" but is entirely swallowed within it, making the metonymic deferral the only mode of ontological access the neurotic has. The explicit invocation of "metonymy" — rather than metaphor — signals that no substitution achieves symbolic condensation or rest; the signifying chain keeps sliding, and it is in that slide that the neurotic's entire being (pour être) is paradoxically housed.

All occurrences

Where it appears in the corpus (1)

  1. #01

    Seminar VI · Desire and Its Interpretation · Jacques Lacan · p.450

    THE DIALECTIC OF DESIRE IN NEUROSIS

    Theoretical move: By re-reading Freud's "A Child is Being Beaten" through the lens of metaphor and alienation, Lacan argues that the obsessive fantasy stages the neurotic's structural relation to desire: the subject sustains desire precisely by perpetuating its precariousness, finding jouissance not in satisfaction but in the symptomatic metonymy of 'être pour' (being-for) that defers 'pour être' (being as such).

    The subject thus does not present himself as a 'pure being' [être pur]... but a 'being for' [être pour]. The ambiguity of the neurotic's position lies precisely in this metonymy, which is such that it is in this être pour that all of his pour être [in order to be] lies.