A Lover's Discourse, Page 35 (transposed from a notebook scribbling -- please excuse any errors):
Most of my injuries come from the stereotype: I am. Obliged to make myself a lover, like everyone else: to be jealous, neglected, frustrated, like everyone else. But when the relation is original then the stereotype is shaken, transcended, evacuated, and jealousy, for instance, has no more room in this relation without a site, without topos, without discourse.
Most of my injuries come from the stereotype: I am. Obliged to make myself a lover, like everyone else: to be jealous, neglected, frustrated, like everyone else. But when the relation is original then the stereotype is shaken, transcended, evacuated, and jealousy, for instance, has no more room in this relation without a site, without topos, without discourse.