Borderline Patient
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#01
Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection · Julia Kristeva · p.58
POWERS OF HORROR > DEVOURING LANGUAGE > AIMING AT THE APOCALYPSE: SIGHT
Theoretical move: Kristeva argues that abjection marks the threshold moment in subject constitution for borderline patients—neither full object-relation nor psychotic non-relation—and that the failure of paternal function produces a 'fortified castle' structure where language desemantizes into pure signifier, with affect making its only imprint in the gaps of that disintegrated discourse; religious codes of defilement/taboo are then read as cultural solutions to the same subject/object instability that abjection names clinically.
Constructed on the one hand by the incestuous desire of (for) his mother and on the other by an overly brutal separation from her, the borderline patient, even though he may be a fortified castle, is nevertheless an empty castle.