English edit

Etymology edit

From Middle French jouissance, from jouir (to enjoy).

Noun edit

jouissance (countable and uncountable, plural jouissances)

  1. (obsolete) Enjoyment, delight, pleasure.
  2. (poststructuralism) A transgressive, excessive kind of pleasure linked to the division and splitting of the subject involved.
    • 2013, Benjamin Noys, Malign Velocities: Accelerationism and Capitalism, Zero Books, →ISBN:
      Instead Lyotard suggests that the worker experiences jouissance, a masochistic pleasure, in the imposed ‘mad destruction’ of their body.

Usage notes edit

  • The sexual connotation (i.e. orgasm) is lacking in the English word enjoyment, and therefore the word is left untranslated in English editions of the works of the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan.

French edit

Etymology edit

From jouir +‎ -ance.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ʒwi.sɑ̃s/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɑ̃s

Noun edit

jouissance f (plural jouissances)

  1. (law) use, possession, enjoyment
  2. enjoyment, deep pleasure
  3. sexual pleasure, sensual delight; orgasm, climax
    • 1785, Donatien Alphonse François de Sade, Les 120 journées de Sodome, ou l'École du libertinage:
      Il est taillé comme une femme et en a tous les goûts; privé par la petitesse de sa consistance de leur donner du plaisir, il l’a imité, et se fait foutre à tout instant du jour. Il aime assez la jouissance de la bouche; c’est la seule qui puisse lui donner des plaisirs comme agent.
      He is built like a woman and has all their tastes; limited by the smallness of his ability to give them pleasure, he has imitated them, and gets fucked at any time of day. He quite enjoys pleasuring by the mouth; it is the only way he is able to give pleasure as the active agent.

Descendants edit

  • Haitian Creole: jwisans

Further reading edit

Middle French edit

Noun edit

jouissance f (plural jouissances)

  1. Alternative form of iouyssance