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                 76   Chapter 4 Marxisms

                      centre, hollowed out by conflicting discourses, that the text is related to history – to a
                      particular moment in history and to the specific ideological discourses that circulate in
                      that moment. The text’s unconscious does not reflect historical contradictions; rather,
                      it evokes, stages and displays them, allowing us, not a ‘scientific’ knowledge of ideo-
                      logy, but an awareness of ‘ideology in contradiction with itself’; breaking down before
                      questions it cannot answer, failing to do what ideology is supposed to do: ‘ideology
                      exists precisely in order to efface all trace of contradiction’ (130).
                         In a formal sense, a text always begins by posing a problem that is to be solved. The
                      text then exists as a process of unfolding: the narrative movement to the final resolu-
                      tion of the problem. Macherey contends that between the problem posed and the reso-
                      lution offered, rather than continuity, there is always a rupture. It is by examining this
                      rupture that we discover the text’s relationship with ideology and history: ‘We always
                      eventually find, at the edge of the text, the language of ideology, momentarily hidden,
                      but eloquent by its very absence’ (60).
                         All narratives contain an ideological project: that is, they promise to tell the ‘truth’
                      about  something.  Information  is  initially  withheld  on  the  promise  that  it  will  be
                      revealed. Narrative constitutes a movement towards disclosure. It begins with a truth
                      promised and ends with a truth revealed. To be rather schematic, Macherey divides the
                      text into three instances: the ideological project (the ‘truth’ promised), the realization
                      (the ‘truth’ revealed), and the unconscious of the text (produced by an act of sympto-
                      matic reading): the return of the repressed historical ‘truth’. ‘Science’, he claims, ‘does
                      away with ideology, obliterates it; literature challenges ideology by using it. If ideo-
                      logy is thought of as a non-systematic ensemble of significations, the work proposes
                      a reading of these significations, by combining them as signs. Criticism teaches us to
                      read these signs’ (133). In this way, Machereyan critical practice seeks to explain the
                      way in which, by giving ideology form, the literary text displays ideology in contradic-
                      tion with itself.
                         In  a  discussion  of  the  work  of  the  French  science  fiction  writer  Jules  Verne,  he
                      demonstrates how Verne’s work stages the contradictions of late-nineteenth-century
                      French  imperialism.  He  argues  that  the  ideological  project  of  Verne’s  work  is  the
                      fantastic staging of the adventures of French imperialism: its colonizing conquest of
                      the earth. Each adventure concerns the hero’s conquest of Nature (a mysterious island,
                      the moon, the bottom of the sea, the centre of the earth). In telling these stories, Verne
                      is ‘compelled’ to tell another: each voyage of conquest becomes a voyage of rediscov-
                      ery, as Verne’s heroes discover that others either have been there before or are there
                      already. The significance of this, for Macherey, lies in the disparity he perceives between
                      ‘representation’ (what is intended: the subject of the narrative) and ‘figuration’ (how
                      it  is  realized:  its  inscription  in  narrative):  Verne  ‘represents’  the  ideology  of  French
                      imperialism, whilst at the same time, through the act of ‘figuration’ (making material
                      in the form of a fiction), undermines one of its central myths in the continual staging of
                      the fact that the lands are always already occupied (similarly, the first edition of this
                      book was written in the middle of a discursive avalanche of media – and other – claims
                      that America was discovered in 1492). ‘In the passage from the level of representation
                      to that of figuration, ideology undergoes a complete modification ...perhaps because
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