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Jacques Lacan

Jacques Marie Émile Lacan (UK: /læˈkɒ̃/,[3] US: /ləˈkɑːn/,[4][5] French: [ʒak maʁi emil lakɑ̃]; 13 April 1901 – 9 September 1981) was a French psychoanalyst and psychiatrist. Described as "the most controversial psycho-analyst since Freud",[6] Lacan gave yearly seminars in Paris, from 1953 to 1981, and published papers that were later collected in the book Écrits. Transcriptions of his seminars, given between 1954 and 1976, were also published.[7] His work made a significant impact on continental philosophy and cultural theory in areas such as post-structuralism, critical theory, feminist theory and film theory, as well as on the practice of psychoanalysis itself.

Jacques Lacan
Born(1901-04-13)13 April 1901
Paris, France
Died9 September 1981(1981-09-09) (aged 80)
Paris, France
EducationCollège Stanislas
(1907–1918)
University of Paris
(SpDip, 1931;[2] M.D., 1932)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolPsychoanalysis
Structuralism
Post-structuralism[1]
InstitutionsUniversity of Paris VIII
Main interests
Psychoanalysis
Notable ideas
Mirror phase
The Real
The Symbolic
The Imaginary
Graph of desire
Split subject
Objet petit a

Lacan took up and discussed the whole range of Freudian concepts, emphasizing the philosophical dimension of Freud's thought and applying concepts derived from structuralism in linguistics and anthropology to its development in his own work, which he would further augment by employing formulae from predicate logic and topology. Taking this new direction, and introducing controversial innovations in clinical practice, led to expulsion for Lacan and his followers from the International Psychoanalytic Association.[8] In consequence, Lacan went on to establish new psychoanalytic institutions to promote and develop his work, which he declared to be a "return to Freud", in opposition to prevalent trends in psychology and institutional psychoanalysis collusive of adaptation to social norms.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Lacan was born in Paris, the eldest of Émilie and Alfred Lacan's three children. His father was a successful soap and oils salesman. His mother was ardently Catholic – his younger brother entered a monastery in 1929. Lacan attended the Collège Stanislas between 1907 and 1918. An interest in philosophy led him to a preoccupation with the work of Spinoza, one outcome of which was his abandonment of religious faith for atheism. There were tensions in the family around this issue, and he regretted not persuading his brother to take a different path, but by 1924 his parents had moved to Boulogne and he was living in rooms in Montmartre.[9]: 104 

During the early 1920s, Lacan actively engaged with the Parisian literary and artistic avant-garde. Having met James Joyce, he was present at the Parisian bookshop where the first readings of passages from Ulysses in French and English took place, shortly before it was published in 1922.[10] He also had meetings with Charles Maurras, whom he admired as a literary stylist, and he occasionally attended meetings of Action Française (of which Maurras was a leading ideologue),[9]: 104  of which he would later be highly critical.

In 1920, after being rejected for military service on the grounds that he was too thin, Lacan entered medical school. Between 1927 and 1931, after completing his studies at the faculty of medicine of the University of Paris, he specialised in psychiatry under the direction of Henri Claude at the Sainte-Anne Hospital, the major psychiatric hospital serving central Paris, at the Infirmary for the Insane of the Police Prefecture under Gaëtan Gatian de Clérambault and also at the Hospital Henri-Rousselle.[11]: 211 

1930s edit

Lacan was involved with the Parisian surrealist movement of the 1930s, associating with André Breton, Georges Bataille, Salvador Dalí, and Pablo Picasso.[12] For a time, he served as Picasso's personal therapist. He attended the mouvement Psyché that Maryse Choisy founded and published in the Surrealist journal Minotaure. "[Lacan's] interest in surrealism predated his interest in psychoanalysis," former Lacanian analyst and biographer Dylan Evans explains, speculating that "perhaps Lacan never really abandoned his early surrealist sympathies, its neo-Romantic view of madness as 'convulsive beauty', its celebration of irrationality."[13] Translator and historian David Macey writes that "the importance of surrealism can hardly be over-stated... to the young Lacan... [who] also shared the surrealists' taste for scandal and provocation, and viewed provocation as an important element in psycho-analysis itself".[14]

In 1931, after a second year at the Sainte-Anne Hospital, Lacan was awarded his Diplôme de médecin légiste (a medical examiner's qualification) and became a licensed forensic psychiatrist. The following year he was awarded his Diplôme d'État de docteur en médecine [fr] (roughly equivalent to an M.D. degree) for his thesis "On Paranoiac Psychosis in its Relations to the Personality" ("De la Psychose paranoïaque dans ses rapports avec la personnalité".[15][11]: 21 [a] Its publication had little immediate impact on French psychoanalysis but it did meet with acclaim amongst Lacan's circle of surrealist writers and artists. In their only recorded instance of direct communication, Lacan sent a copy of his thesis to Sigmund Freud who acknowledged its receipt with a postcard.[11]: 212 

Lacan's thesis was based on observations of several patients with a primary focus on one female patient whom he called Aimée. Its exhaustive reconstruction of her family history and social relations, on which he based his analysis of her paranoid state of mind, demonstrated his dissatisfaction with traditional psychiatry and the growing influence of Freud on his ideas.[16] Also in 1932, Lacan published a translation of Freud's 1922 text, "Über einige neurotische Mechanismen bei Eifersucht, Paranoia und Homosexualität" ("Some Neurotic Mechanisms in Jealousy, Paranoia and Homosexuality") as "De quelques mécanismes névrotiques dans la jalousie, la paranoïa et l'homosexualité" in the Revue française de psychanalyse [fr]. In Autumn 1932, Lacan began his training analysis with Rudolph Loewenstein, which was to last until 1938.[17]

In 1934 Lacan became a candidate member of the Société psychanalytique de Paris (SPP). He began his private psychoanalytic practice in 1936 whilst still seeing patients at the Sainte-Anne Hospital,[9]: 129  and the same year presented his first analytic report at the Congress of the International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA) in Marienbad on the "Mirror Phase". The congress chairman, Ernest Jones, terminated the lecture before its conclusion, since he was unwilling to extend Lacan's stated presentation time. Insulted, Lacan left the congress to witness the Berlin Olympic Games. No copy of the original lecture remains, Lacan having decided not to hand in his text for publication in the conference proceedings.[18]

Lacan's attendance at Kojève's lectures on Hegel, given between 1933 and 1939, and which focused on the Phenomenology and the master-slave dialectic in particular, was formative for his subsequent work,[11]: 96–98  initially in his formulation of his theory of the mirror phase, for which he was also indebted to the experimental work on child development of Henri Wallon.[9]: 143 

It was Wallon who commissioned from Lacan the last major text of his pre-war period, a contribution to the 1938 Encyclopédie française entitled "La Famille" (reprinted in 1984 as "Les Complexes familiaux dans la formation de l'individu", Paris: Navarin). 1938 was also the year of Lacan's accession to full membership (membre titulaire) of the SPP, notwithstanding considerable opposition from many of its senior members who were unimpressed by his recasting of Freudian theory in philosophical terms.[9]: 122 

Lacan married Marie-Louise Blondin in January 1934 and in January 1937 they had the first of their three children, a daughter named Caroline. A son, Thibaut, was born in August 1939 and a daughter, Sybille, in November 1940.[9]: 129 

1940s edit

The SPP was disbanded due to Nazi Germany's occupation of France in 1940. Lacan was called up for military service which he undertook in periods of duty at the Val-de-Grâce military hospital in Paris, whilst at the same time continuing his private psychoanalytic practice. In 1942 he moved into apartments at 5 rue de Lille, which he would occupy until his death. During the war he did not publish any work, turning instead to a study of Chinese for which he obtained a degree from the École spéciale des langues orientales.[9]: 147 [19]

In a relationship they formed before the war, Sylvia Bataille (née Maklès), the estranged wife of his friend Georges Bataille, became Lacan's mistress and, in 1953, his second wife. During the war their relationship was complicated by the threat of deportation for Sylvia, who was Jewish, since this required her to live in the unoccupied territories. Lacan intervened personally with the authorities to obtain papers detailing her family origins, which he destroyed. In 1941 they had a child, Judith. She kept the name Bataille because Lacan wished to delay the announcement of his planned separation and divorce until after the war.[9]: 147 

After the war, the SPP recommenced their meetings. In 1945 Lacan visited England for a five-week study trip, where he met the British analysts Ernest Jones, Wilfred Bion and John Rickman. Bion's analytic work with groups influenced Lacan, contributing to his own subsequent emphasis on study groups as a structure within which to advance theoretical work in psychoanalysis. He published a report of his visit as 'La Psychiatrique anglaise et la guerre' (Evolution psychiatrique 1, 1947, pp.  293–318).

In 1949, Lacan presented a new paper on the mirror stage, 'The Mirror-Stage, as Formative of the I, as Revealed in Psychoanalytic Experience', to the sixteenth IPA congress in Zurich. The same year he set out in the Doctrine de la Commission de l'Enseignement, produced for the Training Commission of the SPP, the protocols for the training of candidates.[11]: 220–221 

1950s edit

With the purchase in 1951 of a country mansion at Guitrancourt, Lacan established a base for weekend retreats for work, leisure—including extravagant social occasions—and for the accommodation of his vast library. His art collection included Courbet's L'Origine du monde, which he had concealed in his study by a removable wooden screen on which an abstract representation of the Courbet by the artist André Masson was portrayed.[9]: 294 

In 1951, Lacan started to hold a private weekly seminar in Paris in which he inaugurated what he described as "a return to Freud," whose doctrines were to be re-articulated through a reading of Saussure's linguistics and Levi-Strauss's structuralist anthropology. Becoming public in 1953, Lacan's 27-year-long seminar was highly influential in Parisian cultural life, as well as in psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice.[9]: 299 

In January 1953 Lacan was elected president of the SPP. When, at a meeting the following June, a formal motion was passed against him criticising his abandonment of the standard analytic training session for the variable-length session, he immediately resigned his presidency. He and a number of colleagues then resigned from the SPP to form the Société Française de Psychanalyse (SFP).[11]: 227  One consequence of this was to eventually deprive the new group of membership of the International Psychoanalytical Association.

Encouraged by the reception of "the return to Freud" and of his report "The Function and Field of Speech and Language in Psychoanalysis," Lacan began to re-read Freud's works in relation to contemporary philosophy, linguistics, ethnology, biology, and topology. From 1953 to 1964 at the Sainte-Anne Hospital, he held his Seminars and presented case histories of patients. During this period he wrote the texts that are found in the collection Écrits, which was first published in 1966. In his seventh seminar "The Ethics of Psychoanalysis" (1959–60), which according to Lewis A. Kirshner "arguably represents the most far-reaching attempt to derive a comprehensive ethical position from psychoanalysis,"[20] Lacan defined the ethical foundations of psychoanalysis and presented his "ethics for our time"—one that would, in the words of Freud, prove to be equal to the tragedy of modern man and to the "discontent of civilization." At the roots of the ethics is desire: the only promise of analysis is austere, it is the entrance-into-the-I (in French a play on words between l'entrée en je and l'entrée en jeu). "I must come to the place where the id was," where the analysand discovers, in its absolute nakedness, the truth of his desire. The end of psychoanalysis entails "the purification of desire." He defended three assertions: that psychoanalysis must have a scientific status; that Freudian ideas have radically changed the concepts of subject, of knowledge, and of desire; and that the analytic field is the only place from which it is possible to question the insufficiencies of science and philosophy.[21]

1960s edit

Starting in 1962, a complex negotiation took place to determine the status of the SFP within the IPA. Lacan's practice (with its controversial indeterminate-length sessions) and his critical stance towards psychoanalytic orthodoxy led, in August 1963, to the IPA setting the condition that registration of the SFP was dependent upon the removal of Lacan from the list of SFP analysts.[22] With the SFP's decision to honour this request in November 1963, Lacan had effectively been stripped of the right to conduct training analyses and thus was constrained to form his own institution in order to accommodate the many candidates who desired to continue their analyses with him. This he did, on 21 June 1964, in the "Founding Act"[23] of what became known as the École Freudienne de Paris (EFP), taking "many representatives of the third generation with him: among them were Maud and Octave Mannoni, Serge Leclaire ... and Jean Clavreul".[24]: 293 

With the support of Claude Lévi-Strauss and Louis Althusser, Lacan was appointed lecturer at the École Pratique des Hautes Études. He started with a seminar on The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis in January 1964 in the Dussane room at the École Normale Supérieure. Lacan began to set forth his own approach to psychoanalysis to an audience of colleagues that had joined him from the SFP. His lectures also attracted many of the École Normale's students. He divided the École Freudienne de Paris into three sections: the section of pure psychoanalysis (training and elaboration of the theory, where members who have been analyzed but have not become analysts can participate); the section for applied psychoanalysis (therapeutic and clinical, physicians who either have not started or have not yet completed analysis are welcome); and the section for taking inventory of the Freudian field (concerning the critique of psychoanalytic literature and the analysis of the theoretical relations with related or affiliated sciences).[25] In 1967 he invented the procedure of the Pass, which was added to the statutes after being voted in by the members of the EFP the following year.

1966 saw the publication of Lacan's collected writings, the Écrits, compiled with an index of concepts by Jacques-Alain Miller. Printed by the prestigious publishing house Éditions du Seuil, the Écrits did much to establish Lacan's reputation to a wider public. The success of the publication led to a subsequent two-volume edition in 1969.

By the 1960s, Lacan was associated, at least in the public mind, with the far left in France.[26] In May 1968, Lacan voiced his sympathy for the student protests and as a corollary his followers set up a Department of Psychology at the University of Vincennes (Paris VIII). However, Lacan's unequivocal comments in 1971 on revolutionary ideals in politics draw a sharp line between the actions of some of his followers and his own style of "revolt."[27]

In 1969, Lacan moved his public seminars to the Faculté de Droit (Panthéon), where he continued to deliver his expositions of analytic theory and practice until the dissolution of his school in 1980.

1970s edit

Throughout the final decade of his life, Lacan continued his widely followed seminars. During this period, he developed his concepts of masculine and feminine jouissance and placed an increased emphasis on the concept of "the Real" as a point of impossible contradiction in the "symbolic order". Lacan continued to draw widely on various disciplines, working closely on classical Chinese literature with François Cheng[28][29] and on the life and work of James Joyce with Jacques Aubert.[30] The growing success of the Écrits, which was translated (in abridged form) into German and English, led to invitations to lecture in Italy, Japan and the United States. He gave lectures in 1975 at Yale, Columbia and MIT.[31]

Last years edit

Lacan's failing health made it difficult for him to meet the demands of the year-long Seminars he had been delivering since the fifties, but his teaching continued into the first year of the eighties. After dissolving his School, the EFP, in January 1980,[32] Lacan travelled to Caracas to found the Freudian Field Institute on 12 July.[33]

The Overture to the Caracas Encounter was to be Lacan's final public address. His last texts from the spring of 1981 are brief institutional documents pertaining to the newly formed Freudian Field Institute.

Lacan died on 9 September 1981.[34]

Major concepts edit

Return to Freud edit

Lacan's "return to Freud" emphasizes a renewed attention to the original texts of Freud, and included a radical critique of ego psychology, whereas "Lacan's quarrel with Object Relations psychoanalysis"[35]: 25  was a more muted affair. Here he attempted "to restore to the notion of the Object Relation... the capital of experience that legitimately belongs to it",[36] building upon what he termed "the hesitant, but controlled work of Melanie Klein... Through her we know the function of the imaginary primordial enclosure formed by the imago of the mother's body",[37] as well as upon "the notion of the transitional object, introduced by D. W. Winnicott... a key-point for the explanation of the genesis of fetishism".[38] Nevertheless, "Lacan systematically questioned those psychoanalytic developments from the 1930s to the 1970s, which were increasingly and almost exclusively focused on the child's early relations with the mother... the pre-Oedipal or Kleinian mother";[39] and Lacan's rereading of Freud—"characteristically, Lacan insists that his return to Freud supplies the only valid model"[40]—formed a basic conceptual starting-point in that oppositional strategy.

Lacan thought that Freud's ideas of "slips of the tongue", jokes, and the interpretation of dreams all emphasized the agency of language in subjects' own constitution of themselves. In "The Instance of the Letter in the Unconscious, or Reason Since Freud," he proposes that "the psychoanalytic experience discovers in the unconscious the whole structure of language". The unconscious is not a primitive or archetypal part of the mind separate from the conscious, linguistic ego, he explained, but rather a formation as complex and structurally sophisticated as consciousness itself. Lacan is associated with the idea that "the unconscious is structured like a language", but the first time this sentence occurs in his work,[41] he clarifies that he means that both the unconscious and language are structured, not that they share a single structure; and that the structure of language is such that the subject cannot necessarily be equated with the speaker. This results in the self being denied any point of reference to which to be "restored" following trauma or a crisis of identity.

André Green objected that "when you read Freud, it is obvious that this proposition doesn't work for a minute. Freud very clearly opposes the unconscious (which he says is constituted by thing-presentations and nothing else) to the pre-conscious. What is related to language can only belong to the pre-conscious".[35]: 5n  Freud certainly contrasted "the presentation of the word and the presentation of the thing... the unconscious presentation is the presentation of the thing alone"[42] in his metapsychology. Dylan Evans, however, in his Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis, "... takes issue with those who, like André Green, question the linguistic aspect of the unconscious, emphasizing Lacan's distinction between das Ding and die Sache in Freud's account of thing-presentation".[35]: 8n  Green's criticism of Lacan also included accusations of intellectual dishonesty, he said, "[He] cheated everybody... the return to Freud was an excuse, it just meant going to Lacan."[43]

Mirror stage edit

Lacan's first official contribution to psychoanalysis was the mirror stage, which he described as "formative of the function of the 'I' as revealed in psychoanalytic experience." By the early 1950s, he came to regard the mirror stage as more than a moment in the life of the infant; instead, it formed part of the permanent structure of subjectivity. In the "imaginary order", the subject's own image permanently catches and captivates the subject. Lacan explains that "the mirror stage is a phenomenon to which I assign a twofold value. In the first place, it has historical value as it marks a decisive turning-point in the mental development of the child. In the second place, it typifies an essential libidinal relationship with the body-image".[44]

As this concept developed further, the stress fell less on its historical value and more on its structural value.[45] In his fourth seminar, "La relation d'objet", Lacan states that "the mirror stage is far from a mere phenomenon which occurs in the development of the child. It illustrates the conflictual nature of the dual relationship. "

The mirror stage describes the formation of the ego via the process of objectification, the ego being the result of a conflict between one's perceived visual appearance and one's emotional experience. This identification is what Lacan called "alienation". At six months, the baby still lacks physical co-ordination. The child is able to recognize itself in a mirror prior to the attainment of control over their bodily movements. The child sees its image as a whole and the synthesis of this image produces a sense of contrast with the lack of co-ordination of the body, which is perceived as a fragmented body. The child experiences this contrast initially as a rivalry with its image, because the wholeness of the image threatens the child with fragmentation—thus the mirror stage gives rise to an aggressive tension between the subject and the image. To resolve this aggressive tension, the child identifies with the image: this primary identification with the counterpart forms the ego.[45] Lacan understood this moment of identification as a moment of jubilation, since it leads to an imaginary sense of mastery; yet when the child compares its own precarious sense of mastery with the omnipotence of the mother, a depressive reaction may accompany the jubilation.[46]

Lacan calls the specular image "orthopaedic", since it leads the child to anticipate the overcoming of its "real specific prematurity of birth". The vision of the body as integrated and contained, in opposition to the child's actual experience of motor incapacity and the sense of his or her body as fragmented, induces a movement from "insufficiency to anticipation".[47] In other words, the mirror image initiates and then aids, like a crutch, the process of the formation of an integrated sense of self.

In the mirror stage a "misunderstanding" (méconnaissance) constitutes the ego—the "me" (moi) becomes alienated from itself through the introduction of an imaginary dimension to the subject. The mirror stage also has a significant symbolic dimension, due to the presence of the figure of the adult who carries the infant. Having jubilantly assumed the image as their own, the child turns their head towards this adult, who represents the big other, as if to call on the adult to ratify this image.[48]

Other edit

While Freud uses the term "other", referring to der Andere (the other person) and das Andere (otherness), Lacan (influenced by the seminar of Alexandre Kojève) theorizes alterity in a manner more closely resembling Hegel's philosophy.

Lacan often used an algebraic symbology for his concepts: the big other (l'Autre) is designated A, and the little other (l'autre) is designated a.[49] He asserts that an awareness of this distinction is fundamental to analytic practice: "the analyst must be imbued with the difference between A and a, so he can situate himself in the place of Other, and not the other".[45]: 135  Dylan Evans explains that:

  • The little other is the other who is not really other, but a reflection and projection of the ego. Evans adds that for this reason the symbol a can represent both the little other and the ego in the schema L.[50] It is simultaneously the counterpart and the specular image. The little other is thus entirely inscribed in the imaginary order.
  • The big other designates radical alterity, an other-ness which transcends the illusory otherness of the imaginary because it cannot be assimilated through identification. Lacan equates this radical alterity with language and the law, and hence the big other is inscribed in the order of the symbolic. Indeed, the big other is the symbolic insofar as it is particularized for each subject. The other is thus both another subject, in its radical alterity and unassimilable uniqueness, and also the symbolic order which mediates the relationship with that other subject."[51]

For Lacan "the Other must first of all be considered a locus in which speech is constituted," so that the other as another subject is secondary to the other as symbolic order.[52] We can speak of the other as a subject in a secondary sense only when a subject occupies this position and thereby embodies the other for another subject.[53]

In arguing that speech originates in neither the ego nor in the subject but rather in the other, Lacan stresses that speech and language are beyond the subject's conscious control. They come from another place, outside of consciousness—"the unconscious is the discourse of the Other".[54] When conceiving the other as a place, Lacan refers to Freud's concept of psychical locality, in which the unconscious is described as "the other scene".

"It is the mother who first occupies the position of the big Other for the child", Dylan Evans explains, "it is she who receives the child's primitive cries and retroactively sanctions them as a particular message".[45] The castration complex is formed when the child discovers that this other is not complete because there is a "lack (manque)" in the other. This means that there is always a signifier missing from the trove of signifiers constituted by the other. Lacan illustrates this incomplete other graphically by striking a bar through the symbol A; hence another name for the castrated, incomplete other is the "barred other".[55]

Phallus edit

Feminist thinkers have both utilised and criticised Lacan's concepts of castration and the phallus. Feminists such as Avital Ronell, Jane Gallop,[56] and Elizabeth Grosz,[57] have interpreted Lacan's work as opening up new possibilities for feminist theory.

Some feminists have argued that Lacan's phallocentric analysis provides a useful means of understanding gender biases and imposed roles, while others, most notably Luce Irigaray, accuse Lacan of maintaining the sexist tradition in psychoanalysis.[58] For Irigaray, the phallus does not define a single axis of gender by its presence or absence; instead, gender has two positive poles. Like Irigaray, French philosopher Jacques Derrida, in criticizing Lacan's concept of castration, discusses the phallus in a chiasmus with the hymen, as both one and other.[59][60]

Three orders (plus one) edit

Lacan considered psychic functions to occur within a universal matrix. The Real, Imaginary and Symbolic are properties of this matrix, which make up part of every psychic function. This is not analogous to Freud's concept of id, ego and superego since in Freud's model certain functions take place within components of the psyche while Lacan thought that all three orders were part of every function. Lacan refined the concept of the orders over decades, resulting in inconsistencies in his writings. He eventually added a fourth component, the sinthome.[61]: 77 

The Imaginary edit

The Imaginary is the field of images and imagination. The main illusions of this order are synthesis, autonomy, duality, and resemblance. Lacan thought that the relationship created within the mirror stage between the ego and the reflected image means that the ego and the Imaginary order itself are places of radical alienation: "alienation is constitutive of the Imaginary order".[62] This relationship is also narcissistic.

In The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis, Lacan argues that the Symbolic order structures the visual field of the Imaginary, which means that it involves a linguistic dimension. If the signifier is the foundation of the symbolic, the signified and signification are part of the Imaginary order. Language has symbolic and Imaginary connotations—in its Imaginary aspect, language is the "wall of language" that inverts and distorts the discourse of the Other. The Imaginary, however, is rooted in the subject's relationship with his or her own body (the image of the body). In Fetishism: the Symbolic, the Imaginary and the Real, Lacan argues that in the sexual plane the Imaginary appears as sexual display and courtship love.

Insofar as identification with the analyst is the objective of analysis, Lacan accused major psychoanalytic schools of reducing the practice of psychoanalysis to the Imaginary order.[63] Instead, Lacan proposes the use of the symbolic to dislodge the disabling fixations of the Imaginary—the analyst transforms the images into words. "The use of the Symbolic", he argued, "is the only way for the analytic process to cross the plane of identification."[64]

The Symbolic edit

In his Seminar IV, "La relation d'objet", Lacan argues that the concepts of "Law" and "Structure" are unthinkable without language—thus the Symbolic is a linguistic dimension. This order is not equivalent to language, however, since language involves the Imaginary and the Real as well. The dimension proper to language in the Symbolic is that of the signifier—that is, a dimension in which elements have no positive existence, but which are constituted by virtue of their mutual differences.

The Symbolic is also the field of radical alterity—that is, the Other; the unconscious is the discourse of this Other. It is the realm of the Law that regulates desire in the Oedipus complex. The Symbolic is the domain of culture as opposed to the Imaginary order of nature. As important elements in the Symbolic, the concepts of death and lack (manque) connive to make of the pleasure principle the regulator of the distance from the Thing (in German, "das Ding an sich") and the death drive that goes "beyond the pleasure principle by means of repetition"—"the death drive is only a mask of the Symbolic order".[49]

By working in the Symbolic order, the analyst is able to produce changes in the subjective position of the person undergoing psychoanalysis. These changes will produce imaginary effects because the Imaginary is structured by the Symbolic.[45]

The Real edit

Lacan's concept of the Real dates back to 1936 and his doctoral thesis on psychosis. It was a term that was popular at the time, particularly with Émile Meyerson, who referred to it as "an ontological absolute, a true being-in-itself".[45]: 162  Lacan returned to the theme of the Real in 1953 and continued to develop it until his death. The Real, for Lacan, is not synonymous with reality. Not only opposed to the Imaginary, the Real is also exterior to the Symbolic. Unlike the latter, which is constituted in terms of oppositions (i.e. presence/absence), "there is no absence in the Real".[49] Whereas the Symbolic opposition "presence/absence" implies the possibility that something may be missing from the Symbolic, "the Real is always in its place".[64] If the Symbolic is a set of differentiated elements (signifiers), the Real in itself is undifferentiated—it bears no fissure. The Symbolic introduces "a cut in the real" in the process of signification: "it is the world of words that creates the world of things—things originally confused in the 'here and now' of the all in the process of coming into being".[65] The Real is that which is outside language and that resists symbolization absolutely. In Seminar XI Lacan defines the Real as "the impossible" because it is impossible to imagine, impossible to integrate into the Symbolic, and impossible to attain. It is this resistance to symbolization that lends the Real its traumatic quality. Finally, the Real is the object of anxiety, insofar as it lacks any possible mediation and is "the essential object which is not an object any longer, but this something faced with which all words cease and all categories fail, the object of anxiety par excellence."[49]

The Sinthome edit

The term "sinthome" (French: [sɛ̃tom]) was introduced by Jacques Lacan in his seminar Le sinthome (1975–76). According to Lacan, sinthome is the Latin way (1495 Rabelais, IV,63[66]) of spelling the Greek origin of the French word symptôme, meaning symptom. The seminar is a continuing elaboration of his topology, extending the previous seminar's focus (RSI) on the Borromean Knot and an exploration of the writings of James Joyce. Lacan redefines the psychoanalytic symptom in terms of his topology of the subject.

In "Psychoanalysis and its Teachings" (Écrits) Lacan views the symptom as inscribed in a writing process, not as ciphered message which was the traditional notion. In his seminar "L'angoisse" (1962–63) he states that the symptom does not call for interpretation: in itself it is not a call to the Other but a pure jouissance addressed to no-one. This is a shift from the linguistic definition of the symptom—as a signifier—to his assertion that "the symptom can only be defined as the way in which each subject enjoys (jouit) the unconscious in so far as the unconscious determines the subject". He goes from conceiving the symptom as a message which can be deciphered by reference to the unconscious structured like a language to seeing it as the trace of the particular modality of the subject's jouissance.

Desire edit

Lacan's concept of desire is related to Hegel's Begierde, a term that implies a continuous force, and therefore somehow differs from Freud's concept of Wunsch.[67] Lacan's desire refers always to unconscious desire because it is unconscious desire that forms the central concern of psychoanalysis.

The aim of psychoanalysis is to lead the analysand to recognize his/her desire and by doing so to uncover the truth about his/her desire. However this is possible only if desire is articulated in speech:[68] "It is only once it is formulated, named in the presence of the other, that desire appears in the full sense of the term."[69] And again in The Ego in Freud's Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis: "what is important is to teach the subject to name, to articulate, to bring desire into existence. The subject should come to recognize and to name her/his desire. But it isn't a question of recognizing something that could be entirely given. In naming it, the subject creates, brings forth, a new presence in the world."[70] The truth about desire is somehow present in discourse, although discourse is never able to articulate the entire truth about desire; whenever discourse attempts to articulate desire, there is always a leftover or surplus.[71]

Lacan distinguishes desire from need and from demand. Need is a biological instinct where the subject depends on the Other to satisfy its own needs: in order to get the Other's help, "need" must be articulated in "demand". But the presence of the Other not only ensures the satisfaction of the "need", it also represents the Other's love. Consequently, "demand" acquires a double function: on the one hand, it articulates "need", and on the other, acts as a "demand for love". Even after the "need" articulated in demand is satisfied, the "demand for love" remains unsatisfied since the Other cannot provide the unconditional love that the subject seeks. "Desire is neither the appetite for satisfaction, nor the demand for love, but the difference that results from the subtraction of the first from the second."[72] Desire is a surplus, a leftover, produced by the articulation of need in demand: "desire begins to take shape in the margin in which demand becomes separated from need".[72] Unlike need, which can be satisfied, desire can never be satisfied: it is constant in its pressure and eternal. The attainment of desire does not consist in being fulfilled but in its reproduction as such. As Slavoj Žižek puts it, "desire's raison d'être is not to realize its goal, to find full satisfaction, but to reproduce itself as desire".[73]

Lacan also distinguishes between desire and the drives: desire is one and drives are many. The drives are the partial manifestations of a single force called desire.[74] Lacan's concept of "objet petit a" is the object of desire, although this object is not that towards which desire tends, but rather the cause of desire. Desire is not a relation to an object but a relation to a lack (manque).

In The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis Lacan argues that "man's desire is the desire of the Other." This entails the following:

  1. Desire is the desire of the Other's desire, meaning that desire is the object of another's desire and that desire is also desire for recognition. Here Lacan follows Alexandre Kojève, who follows Hegel: for Kojève the subject must risk his own life if he wants to achieve the desired prestige.[75] This desire to be the object of another's desire is best exemplified in the Oedipus complex, when the subject desires to be the phallus of the mother.
  2. In "The Subversion of the Subject and the Dialectic of Desire in the Freudian Unconscious",[76] Lacan contends that the subject desires from the point of view of another whereby the object of someone's desire is an object desired by another one: what makes the object desirable is that it is precisely desired by someone else. Again Lacan follows Kojève. who follows Hegel. This aspect of desire is present in hysteria, for the hysteric is someone who converts another's desire into his/her own (see Sigmund Freud's "Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria" in SE VII, where Dora desires Frau K because she identifies with Herr K). What matters then in the analysis of a hysteric is not to find out the object of her desire but to discover the subject with whom she identifies.
  3. Désir de l'Autre, which is translated as "desire for the Other" (though it could also be "desire of the Other"). The fundamental desire is the incestuous desire for the mother, the primordial Other.[77]
  4. Desire is "the desire for something else", since it is impossible to desire what one already has. The object of desire is continually deferred, which is why desire is a metonymy.[78]
  5. Desire appears in the field of the Other—that is, in the unconscious.

Last but not least for Lacan, the first person who occupies the place of the Other is the mother and at first the child is at her mercy. Only when the father articulates desire with the Law by castrating the mother is the subject liberated from desire for the mother.[79]

Drive edit

Lacan maintains Freud's distinction between drive (Trieb) and instinct (Instinkt). Drives differ from biological needs because they can never be satisfied and do not aim at an object but rather circle perpetually around it. He argues that the purpose of the drive (Triebziel) is not to reach a goal but to follow its aim, meaning "the way itself" instead of "the final destination"—that is, to circle around the object. The purpose of the drive is to return to its circular path and the true source of jouissance is the repetitive movement of this closed circuit.[80] Lacan posits drives as both cultural and symbolic constructs: to him, "the drive is not a given, something archaic, primordial".[80] He incorporates the four elements of drives as defined by Freud (pressure, end, object and source) to his theory of the drive's circuit: the drive originates in the erogenous zone, circles round the object, and returns to the erogenous zone. Three grammatical voices structure this circuit:

  1. the active voice (to see)
  2. the reflexive voice (to see oneself)
  3. the passive voice (to be seen)

The active and reflexive voices are autoerotic—they lack a subject. It is only when the drive completes its circuit with the passive voice that a new subject appears, implying that, prior to that instance, there was no subject.[80] Despite being the "passive" voice, the drive is essentially active: "to make oneself be seen" rather than "to be seen". The circuit of the drive is the only way for the subject to transgress the pleasure principle.

To Freud sexuality is composed of partial drives (i.e. the oral or the anal drives) each specified by a different erotogenic zone. At first these partial drives function independently (i.e. the polymorphous perversity of children), it is only in puberty that they become organized under the aegis of the genital organs.[81] Lacan accepts the partial nature of drives, but (1) he rejects the notion that partial drives can ever attain any complete organization—the primacy of the genital zone, if achieved, is always precarious; and (2) he argues that drives are partial in that they represent sexuality only partially and not in the sense that they are a part of the whole. Drives do not represent the reproductive function of sexuality but only the dimension of jouissance.[80]

Lacan identifies four partial drives: the oral drive (the erogenous zones are the lips (the partial object the breast—the verb is "to suck"), the anal drive (the anus and the faeces, "to shit"), the scopic drive (the eyes and the gaze, "to see") and the invocatory drive (the ears and the voice, "to hear"). The first two drives relate to demand and the last two to desire.

The notion of dualism is maintained throughout Freud's various reformulations of the drive-theory. From the initial opposition between sexual drives and ego-drives (self-preservation) to the final opposition between the life drives (Lebenstriebe) and the death drives (Todestriebe).[82] Lacan retains Freud's dualism, but in terms of an opposition between the symbolic and the imaginary and not referred to different kinds of drives. For Lacan all drives are sexual drives, and every drive is a death drive (pulsion de mort) since every drive is excessive, repetitive and destructive.[83]

The drives are closely related to desire, since both originate in the field of the subject.[80] But they are not to be confused: drives are the partial aspects in which desire is realized—desire is one and undivided, whereas the drives are its partial manifestations. A drive is a demand that is not caught up in the dialectical mediation of desire; drive is a "mechanical" insistence that is not ensnared in demand's dialectical mediation.[84]

Other concepts edit

Lacan on error and knowledge edit

Building on Freud's The Psychopathology of Everyday Life, Lacan long argued that "every unsuccessful act is a successful, not to say 'well-turned', discourse", highlighting as well "sudden transformations of errors into truths, which seemed to be due to nothing more than perseverance".[85] In a late seminar, he generalised more fully the psychoanalytic discovery of "truth—arising from misunderstanding", so as to maintain that "the subject is naturally erring... discourse structures alone give him his moorings and reference points, signs identify and orient him; if he neglects, forgets, or loses them, he is condemned to err anew".[86]

Because of "the alienation to which speaking beings are subjected due to their being in language",[87] to survive "one must let oneself be taken in by signs and become the dupe of a discourse... [of] fictions organized in to a discourse".[88] For Lacan, with "masculine knowledge irredeemably an erring",[89] the individual "must thus allow himself to be fooled by these signs to have a chance of getting his bearings amidst them; he must place and maintain himself in the wake of a discourse... become the dupe of a discourse... les non-dupes errent".[88]

Lacan comes close here to one of the points where "very occasionally he sounds like Thomas Kuhn (whom he never mentions)",[90] with Lacan's "discourse" resembling Kuhn's "paradigm" seen as "the entire constellation of beliefs, values, techniques, and so on shared by the members of a given community".[91]

Clinical contributions edit

Variable-length session edit

The "variable-length psychoanalytic session" was one of Lacan's crucial clinical innovations,[92] and a key element in his conflicts with the IPA, to whom his "innovation of reducing the fifty-minute analytic hour to a Delphic seven or eight minutes (or sometimes even to a single oracular parole murmured in the waiting-room)"[93] was unacceptable. Lacan's variable-length sessions lasted anywhere from a few minutes (or even, if deemed appropriate by the analyst, a few seconds) to several hours.[citation needed] This practice replaced the classical Freudian "fifty minute hour".

With respect to what he called "the cutting up of the 'timing'", Lacan asked the question, "Why make an intervention impossible at this point, which is consequently privileged in this way?"[94] By allowing the analyst's intervention on timing, the variable-length session removed the patient's former certainty as to the length of time that they would be on the couch.[95]: 18  When Lacan adopted the practice, "the psychoanalytic establishment were scandalized"[95]: 17 [96]—and, given that "between 1979 and 1980 he saw an average of ten patients an hour", it is perhaps not hard to see why. Psychoanalysis was "reduced to zero",[24]: 397 , though the treatments were no less lucrative.

At the time of his original innovation, Lacan described the issue as concerning "the systematic use of shorter sessions in certain analyses, and in particular in training analyses";[97] and in practice it was certainly a shortening of the session around the so-called "critical moment"[98] which took place, so that critics wrote that "everyone is well aware what is meant by the deceptive phrase 'variable length' ... sessions systematically reduced to just a few minutes".[99] Irrespective of the theoretical merits of breaking up patients' expectations, it was clear that "the Lacanian analyst never wants to 'shake up' the routine by keeping them for more rather than less time".[100] Lacan's shorter sessions enabled him to take many more clients than therapists using orthodox Freudian methods, and this growth continued as Lacan's students and followers adopted the same practice.[101]

Accepting the importance of "the critical moment when insight arises",[102] object relations theory would nonetheless suggest that "if the analyst does not provide the patient with space in which nothing needs to happen there is no space in which something can happen".[103] Julia Kristeva would concur that "Lacan, alert to the scandal of the timeless intrinsic to the analytic experience, was mistaken in wanting to ritualize it as a technique of scansion (short sessions)".[104]

Writings and writing style edit

According to Jean-Michel Rabaté, Lacan in the mid-1950s classed the seminars as commentaries on Freud rather than presentations of his own doctrine (like the writings), while Lacan by 1971 placed the most value on his teaching and "the interactive space of his seminar" (in contrast to Sigmund Freud). Rabaté also argued that from 1964 onward, the seminars include original ideas. However, Rabaté also wrote that the seminars are "more problematic" because of the importance of the interactive performances, and because they were partly edited and rewritten.[105]

Most of Lacan's psychoanalytic writings from the 1940s through to the early 1960s were compiled with an index of concepts by Jacques-Alain Miller in the 1966 collection, titled simply Écrits. Published in French by Éditions du Seuil, they were later issued as a two-volume set (1970/1) with a new "Preface". A selection of the writings (chosen by Lacan himself) were translated by Alan Sheridan and published by Tavistock Press in 1977. The full 35-text volume appeared for the first time in English in Bruce Fink's translation published by Norton & Co. (2006). The Écrits were included on the list of 100 most influential books of the 20th century compiled and polled by the broadsheet Le Monde.

Lacan's writings from the late sixties and seventies (thus subsequent to the 1966 collection) were collected posthumously, along with some early texts from the nineteen thirties, in the Éditions du Seuil volume Autres écrits (2001).

Although most of the texts in Écrits and Autres écrits are closely related to Lacan's lectures or lessons from his Seminar, more often than not the style is denser than Lacan's oral delivery, and a clear distinction between the writings and the transcriptions of the oral teaching is evident to the reader.

An often neglected aspect of Lacan's oral and writing style is his influence from his colleague and personal friend Henry Corbin, who introduced Lacan to the thought of Ibn Arabi.[106][107][108] Both Lacan and Ibn Arabi share nearly identical ideas and writing styles according to the researcher Abdesselem Rechak.[109]

Jacques-Alain Miller is the sole editor of Lacan's seminars, which contain the majority of his life's work. "There has been considerable controversy over the accuracy or otherwise of the transcription and editing", as well as over "Miller's refusal to allow any critical or annotated edition to be published".[110] Despite Lacan's status as a major figure in the history of psychoanalysis, some of his seminars remain unpublished. Since 1984, Miller has been regularly conducting a series of lectures, "L'orientation lacanienne." Miller's teachings have been published in the US by the journal Lacanian Ink.

Lacan's writing is notoriously difficult, due in part to the repeated Hegelian/Kojèvean allusions, wide theoretical divergences from other psychoanalytic and philosophical theory, and an obscure prose style. For some, "the impenetrability of Lacan's prose... [is] too often regarded as profundity precisely because it cannot be understood".[111] Arguably at least, "the imitation of his style by other 'Lacanian' commentators" has resulted in "an obscurantist antisystematic tradition in Lacanian literature".[112]

Although Lacan is a major influence on psychoanalysis in France and parts of Latin America, in the English-speaking world his influence on clinical psychology has been far less and his ideas are best known in the arts and humanities. However, there are Lacanian psychoanalytic societies in both North America and the United Kingdom that carry on his work.[45]

One example of Lacan's work being practiced in the United States is found in the works of Annie G. Rogers (A Shining Affliction; The Unsayable: The Hidden Language of Trauma), which credit Lacanian theory for many therapeutic insights in successfully treating sexually abused young women.[113] Lacan's work has also reached Quebec, where The Interdisciplinary Freudian Group for Research and Clinical and Cultural Interventions (GIFRIC) claims that it has used a modified form of Lacanian psychoanalysis in successfully treating psychosis in many of its patients, a task once thought to be unsuited for psychoanalysis, even by psychoanalysts themselves.[114]

Legacy edit

In his introduction to the 1994 Penguin edition of Lacan's The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis, translator and historian David Macey describes Lacan as "the most controversial psycho-analyst since Freud".[6] His ideas had a significant impact on post-structuralism, critical theory, French philosophy, film theory, and clinical psychoanalysis.[115]

In 2003, Rabaté described "The Freudian Thing" (1956) as one of his "most important and programmatic essays".[105]

Criticism edit

Theory of psychoanalysis edit

Social psychologist, psychoanalyst, and humanistic philosopher Erich Fromm rejected Lacan's view on psychonalysis whereby "true psychoanalysis is founded on the relation between man and talk [parole],"[116] and denounced the reduction of analysis to "a pure and simple exchange of words," arguing that the relation is instead about an "exchange of signs." Fromm supports "clarity and unambiguity" in the communication with others (autrui) and opposes the Lacanian "wordplay [that] is associated with the provision of meaning."[117] Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalyst Élisabeth Roudinesco, in her biography of Lacan, writes that some writings of her subject were "incomprehensible" also to Maurice Merleau-Ponty,[118]: 206  Claude Lévi-Strauss,[118]: 305  and Martin Heidegger.[118]: 306 

Former Lacan student Didier Anzieu, in a 1967 article titled "Against Lacan," described him as a "danger" because he kept his students tied to an "unending dependence on an idol, a logic, or a language," by holding out the promise of "fundamental truths" to be revealed "but always at some further point ...and only to those who continued to travel with him." According to Sherry Turkle, these attitudes are "representative of how most members of the Association talk about Lacan."[b][119]

By 1977, Lacan was declaring that he was not "too keen" ("pas chaud-chaud") to claim that "when one practices psychoanalysis, one knows where one goes," stating that "psychoanalysis, like every other human activity, undoubtedly participates in abuse. One does as if one knows something."[120]

Lacan's charismatic authority has been linked to the many conflicts among his followers and in the analytic schools he was involved with.[121] His intellectual style has also come in for much criticism. Eclectic in his use of sources,[122] Lacan has been seen as concealing his own thought behind the apparent explication of that of others.[24]: 46  Thus, his "return to Freud" was called by Malcolm Bowie "a complete pattern of dissenting assent to the ideas of Freud . . . Lacan's argument is conducted on Freud's behalf and, at the same time, against him".[123] Bowie has also suggested that Lacan suffered from both a love of system and a deep-seated opposition to all forms of system.[124]

Therapeutic practice edit

Lacan, in his psychoanalytic practice, came to hold sessions of diminishing duration.[125] Eventually, Lacan's student relates, they often lasted no more than five minutes, held sometimes with Lacan standing in the typically open door of the room.[c] According to Godin, Lacan sometimes struck patients, once literally kicking out a female patient.[126]: 82  Author and Lacanian psychoanalyst Jacques-Alain Miller asserts that "[Lacan]'s morality derives from a superior cynicism."[127]

Lacan was criticised for being aggressive with his clients, often physically hitting them, sometimes sleeping with them,[128]: 304 [d] and charging "exorbitant amounts of money" for each session.[129][e] Jean Laplanche argued that Lacan could have "harmed" some of his clients.[130]

Others have been more forceful still, describing him as "The Shrink from Hell"[131][132][133] and listing the many associates —from lovers and family to colleagues, patients, and editors— who were left damaged in his wake.

Feminist criticism edit

Many feminist thinkers have criticized Lacan's thought. American philosopher Cynthia Willett accuses Lacan for portraying the mother less as a "loving," "nurturing" presence in the infant's world, but rather as a "whore" who abandons the child to a "higher bidder for her affections,"[134] while Judith Butler, philosopher and gender studies scholar, reworks these notions as "gender performativity."[135]

Psycholinguist and cultural theorist Luce Irigaray "ridicules" through "mimicry and exaggeration" these representations of femininity posited as natural and proper by Lacan.[136] Irigaray accuses Lacan of perpetuating phallocentric mastery in philosophical and psychoanalytic discourse.[137][f]

Others have echoed this accusation, seeing Lacan as trapped in the very phallocentric mastery his language ostensibly sought to undermine.[138] The result, Castoriadis would maintain, was to make all thought depend upon Lacan himself, and thus to stifle the capacity for independent thought among all those around him.[24]: 386 

In an interview with anthropologist James Hunt, Sylvia Lacan said of her late husband: "He was a man who worked tremendously hard. Tremendously intelligent. He was...what is called, well, a domestic tyrant... But he was worth the trouble. I have absolutely no reproaches to make against him. Just the contrary. But it was not possible to be a wife, a mother to my children, and an actress at the same time."[139]

Mathematics in psychoanalysis edit

In their work Fashionable Nonsense (1997), through which their stated intention was to show that "famous intellectuals" abuse scientific terminology and concepts,[140]: x  professors of Physics Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont examine Lacan's frequent references to Mathematics. They are highly critical of his use of terms from mathematical fields, accusing him of "superficial erudition", of abusing scientific concepts that he does not understand, and of producing statements that are "not even wrong."[140]: 21

In a seminar held in 1959, he confuses the irrational numbers with the imaginary numbers, despite claiming to be "precise."[g] A year later, the mathematical "calculations" he presents in another seminar are assessed as "pure fantasies."[140]: 25-26 

Sokal and Bricmont find Lacan to be "fond" of topology, in which, though, they see Lacan committing serious errors. He uses technical terms erroneously, e.g. "space", "bounded", "closed", and even "topology" itself, and posits claims about a literal and not just symbolic or even metaphorical relation of topological mathematics with neurosis.[h][140]: 18-21 [141]

In the book's preface, the authors state they shall not enter into the debate over the purely psychoanalytic part of Lacan's work.[140]: 17  Nonetheless, after presenting their case, they comment that "Lacan never explains the relevance of his mathematical concepts for psychoanalysis," stating that "the link with psychoanalysis is not supported by any argument." Equally meaningless they find his "famous formulae of sexuation" offered in support for the maxim "There are no sexual relations." Considering the "cryptic writings," the "play on words" and "fractured syntax", as well as the "reverent exegesis" accorded to Lacan's work by "disciples", they point out a similarity to religiosity.[i][140]: 31-37 

Incomprehensibility edit

Several critics have dismissed Lacan's work wholesale. French philosopher François Roustang [fr] called it an "incoherent system of pseudo-scientific gibberish", and quoted linguist Noam Chomsky's opinion that Lacan was an "amusing and perfectly self-conscious charlatan".[142] Noam Chomsky, in a 2012 interview on Veterans Unplugged, said: "[Q]uite frankly I thought [Lacan] was a total charlatan. He was just posturing for the television cameras in the way many Paris intellectuals do. Why this is influential, I haven't the slightest idea. I don't see anything there that should be influential."[143]

Academic and former Lacanian analyst Dylan Evans[j] came to dismiss Lacanianism as lacking a sound scientific basis and as harming rather than helping patients. He criticized Lacan's followers for treating Lacan's writings as "holy writ".[144] Richard Webster decries what he sees as Lacan's obscurity, arrogance, and the resultant "Cult of Lacan".[145]

Roger Scruton included Lacan in his book Fools, Frauds and Firebrands: Thinkers of the New Left, and named him as the only 'fool' included in the book—his other targets merely being misguided or frauds.[146]

In Les Freudiens hérétiques, the 8th tome of his work Contre-histoire de la philosophie (Anti-History of Philosophy),[128] philosopher and author Michel Onfray describes Lacan's Écrits as "illegible".[128]: 49  According to Onfray, Lacan engages in constant word play, has a taste for the formulaic, and deploys "incantatory glossolalia" and unnecessary neologisms.[k] He calls Lacan a "charlatan," and a "dandy figure" who "sinks into autism," eventually becoming senile.[128]: 49–50 

Works edit

Selected works published in English listed below. More complete listings can be found at Lacan.com.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ The thesis was published in Paris by Librairie E. Francois (1932); reprinted in Paris by Éditions du Seuil (1975)
  2. ^ When the French Society of Psychoanalysis requested official recognition from and affiliation with the Association Psychanalytique Internationale (International Psychoanalytical Association) in 1959, the API demanded the sidelining of Jacques Lacan as a didactician. Two currents of the Société Française de Psychanalyse (French Society of Psychoanalysis) then stood opposed at each other: one, which became the majority in the SFP in November 1963, was led by Daniel Lagache, and others, while a second current, which became the minority, brought together the supporters of Jacques Lacan.
  3. ^ Godin relates, without criticizing this, that Lacan would often read Le Figaro throughout a session, "turning the pages noisily" and sometimes exclaiming 'this is insane!' at what he was reading. And he'd never give change if the client did not have the exact amount of money for the session.
  4. ^ In her biography, Roudinesco clarifies that this would happen "always away from the place where the analysis was taking place."
  5. ^ Rey, who was Marie Claire editor, relates that in order to be able to meet the prices of Lacan, for whom he constantly felt "gratitude," abandoned journalism and started writing best-sellers.
  6. ^ Irigaray too has been criticized by Sokal & Bricmont for ostensibly misusing scientific terminology in her work. Among their points of criticism, are the interest Irigaray claims Einstein had in "accelerations without electromagnetic re-equilibrations", her confusing special relativity for general relativity, and her claim (Irigaray, To Speak is Never Neutral, 2017) that Einstein's mass–energy equivalence equation is a "sexed equation" since "it privileges the speed of light over other speeds that are vitally necessary to us".
  7. ^ Lacan is quoted defining "human life" as a "calculus in which zero is irrational."
  8. ^ E.g. Lacan states: "[The] torus really exists and it is exactly the structure of the neurotic. It is not an analogon; it is not even an abstraction, because an abstraction is some sort of diminution of reality, and I think [the torus] is reality itself." Lacan (1970)
  9. ^ They end posing the rhetorical question whether we are "dealing with a new religion."
  10. ^ Evans published a dictionary of Lacanian terms in 1996, titled An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis.
  11. ^ In 2002, the Lacanian School of Psychoanalysis, École lacanienne de psychanalyse, edited and published a book titled 789 Neologismes de Jacques Lacan (Epel publishers).

References edit

  1. ^ Yannis Stavrakakis, Lacan and the Political, Routledge, 2002, p. 13: "Lacan has been hailed as one of the cornerstones of this movement [poststructuralism]..."
  2. ^ Michael P. Clark, Jacques Lacan (Volume I): An Annotated Bibliography, Routledge, 2014, p. xviii: "After completing his studies at the Faculté de médecine de Paris, Lacan began his residence at the Hôpital Saint-Anne in Paris. There he specialized in psychiatry under the direction of Gaétan Gatian de Clérambault... From 1928–1929, Lacan studied at the Infirmerie Spéciale pres de la Préfecture de Police [fr] and received a Diplôme de médecin légiste (specialist in legal medicine) after working at the Hôpital Henri Rousselle from 1929 to 1931. In 1932, after a second year at Saint Anne's Clinique de Maladies Mentales et de l'Encéphale, Lacan received the Doctorat d'état in psychiatry and published his thesis, De la Psychose paranoïaque dans ses rapports avec la personnalité..."
  3. ^ . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 27 October 2021.
  4. ^ "Lacan, Jacques". Lexico UK English Dictionary US English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[permanent dead link][dead link]
  5. ^ "Lacan". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  6. ^ a b David Macey, "Introduction", Jacques Lacan (1994). The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis, London: Penguin Books, p. xiv
  7. ^ "SEMINARS OF JACQUES LACAN - CONTENTS". www.lacan.com. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
  8. ^ Bowie, Malcolm, Lacan, London: Fontana, 1991. p. 45
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Roudinesco, E.; Mehlman, J.; Lacan, J. (1990). Jacques Lacan & Co: A History of Psychoanalysis in France, 1925–1985. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-72997-8. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  10. ^ Catherine Millot Life with Lacan, Cambridge: Polity Press 2018, p. 104.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Macey, David (1988). Lacan in Contexts. London: Verso. ISBN 978-0860919421.
  12. ^ Desmond, John (2012). Psychoanalytic Accounts of Consuming Desire: Hearts of Darkness. NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
  13. ^ Evans, Dylan, ""From Lacan to Darwin" 2006-02-10 at the Wayback Machine", in The Literary Animal; Evolution and the Nature of Narrative, eds. Jonathan Gottschall and David Sloan Wilson, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 2005
  14. ^ David Macey, "Introduction" in Jacques Lacan (1994) The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis, London:Penuin Books, pp. xv–xvi
  15. ^ Lacan, Jaques (1975). "De la psychose paranoïaque dans ses rapports avec la personnalité" (PDF). Éditions du Seuil.
  16. ^ Evans, Julia. "Lacanian Works". Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  17. ^ Laurent, É., "Lacan, Analysand" in Hurly-Burly, Issue 3.
  18. ^ Roudinesco, Elisabeth. "The mirror stage: an obliterated archive" The Cambridge Companion to Lacan. Ed. Jean-Michel Rabaté. Cambridge: CUP, 2003
  19. ^ Serrano, Richard (22 May 1997). "Lacan's Oriental Language of the Unconscious". SubStance. 26 (3): 90–106. doi:10.2307/3685596. JSTOR 3685596.
  20. ^ Kirshner, Lewis A. (1 December 2012). "Toward an Ethics of Psychoanalysis: A Critical Reading of Lacan's Ethics". Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association. 60 (6): 1223–1242. doi:10.1177/0003065112457876. ISSN 0003-0651. PMID 23118239.
  21. ^ Le séminaire, Livre VIII: Le transfert, Paris: Seuil, 1991.
  22. ^ "Minutes of the IPA: The SFP Study Group" in Television/A Challenge to the Psychoanalytic Establishment, pp. 79–80.
  23. ^ Lacan, J., "Founding Act" in Television/A Challenge to the Psychoanalytic Establishment, pp. 97–106.
  24. ^ a b c d Roudinesco, Elisabeth (1997). Jacques Lacan. Cambridge: Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-7456-1523-3. OCLC 37852095.
  25. ^ Proposition du 9 octobre 1967 sur le psychanalyste à l'École.
  26. ^ French Communist Party "official philosopher" Louis Althusser did much to advance this association in the 1960s. Zoltán Tar and Judith Marcus in Frankfurt school of sociology ISBN 0-87855-963-9 (p. 276) wrote that "Althusser's call to Marxists that the Lacanian enterprise might ... help further revolutionary ends, endorsed Lacan's work even further." Elizabeth A. Grosz writes in her Jacques Lacan: A Feminist Introduction that "Shortly after the tumultuous events of May 1968, Lacan was accused by the authorities of being a subversive, and directly influencing the events that transpired."
  27. ^ Regnault, F., "I Was Struck by What You Said..." Hurly-Burly, 6, 23–28.
  28. ^ Price, A., "Lacan's Remarks on Chinese Poetry". Hurly-Burly 2 (2009)
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 February 2022. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
  30. ^ Lacan, J., Le séminaire, livre XXIII, Le sinthome
  31. ^ Lacan, J., "Conférences et entretiens dans les universités nord-américans". Scilicet, 6/7 (1976)
  32. ^ Lacan, J., "Letter of Dissolution". Television/ A Challenge to the Psychoanalytic Establishment, 129–131.
  33. ^ Lacan, J., "Overture to the 1st International Encounter of the Freudian Field" , Hurly-Burly 6.
  34. ^ Johnston, Adrian (10 July 2018). "Jacques Lacan". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Stanford University.
  35. ^ a b c Jacobus, Mary (2005). The poetics of psychoanalysis: in the wake of Klein. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-924636-6. OCLC 67231305.
  36. ^ Jacques Lacan, Ecrits: A Selection (London 1997) p. 197
  37. ^ Lacan, Ecrits p. 197 and p. 20
  38. ^ Lacan, Ecrits p. 250
  39. ^ Lisa Appignanesi/John Forrester, Freud's Women (London 2005) p. 462
  40. ^ David Macey, "Introduction", Jacques Lacan, The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis (London 1994) p. xxii
  41. ^ Lacan, "Of Structure as an Inmixing of an Otherness Prerequisite to Any Subject Whatever". In The Languages of Criticism and the Sciences of Man: The Structuralist Controversy, ed. R. Macksey & E. Donato, Baltimore & London, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1970, 186–195
  42. ^ Sigmund Freud, On Metapsychology (Penguin 1984) p. 207
  43. ^ "The Dead Mother: The Work of André Green (Book Review)". apadivisions.org. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  44. ^ Lacan, J., "Some Reflections on the Ego" in Écrits
  45. ^ a b c d e f g Evans, D. (1996). An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-13522-1.
  46. ^ Lacan, J., "La relation d'objet" in Écrits.
  47. ^ Lacan, J., "The Mirror Stage as Formative of the Function of the I", in Écrits: a selection, London, Routledge Classics, 2001; p. 5
  48. ^ Lacan, Tenth Seminar, "L'angoisse," 1962–1963
  49. ^ a b c d Lacan, J., The Seminar of Jacques Lacan: Book II: The Ego in Freud's Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis 1954–1955 (W. W. Norton & Company, 1991), ISBN 978-0-393-30709-2
  50. ^ Schema L in The Seminar. Book II. The Ego in Freud's Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis.
  51. ^ Dylan Evans, An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis (London: Routledge, 1996), p. 133; translation modified.
  52. ^ Lacan, J., "The Seminar. Book III. The Psychoses, 1955–1956," translated by Russell Grigg (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1997)
  53. ^ Lacan, J., Le séminaire. Livre VIII: Le transfert, 1960–1961. ed. Jacques-Alain Miller (Paris: Seuil, 1994).
  54. ^ Lacan, J., "Seminar on 'The Purloined Letter'" in Écrits.
  55. ^ Lacan, J., "The Agency of the Letter in the Unconscious" in Écrits and Seminar V: Les formations de l'inconscient
  56. ^ Gallop, Jane, Reading Lacan. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985
  57. ^ Elizabeth A. Grosz, Jacques Lacan: A Feminist Introduction
  58. ^ Irigary, Luce, This Sex Which Is Not One 1977 (Eng. trans. 1985)
  59. ^ Derrida, Jacques, Dissemination (1983)
  60. ^ Butler, Judith. Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of "Sex" (1993)
  61. ^ Bailly, Lionel (1 December 2012). Lacan: A Beginner's Guide. Oneworld Publications. ISBN 978-1-78074-162-8.
  62. ^ Lacan, Seminar III: The Psychoses.
  63. ^ Écrits, "The Directions of the Treatment."
  64. ^ a b Lacan, J. Seminar XI: The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis.
  65. ^ Lacan, J., "The Function and Field of Speech and Language in Psychoanalysis" in Écrits.
  66. ^ The term used by Rabelais is not sinthome but symptomates: "Amis, respondit Pantagruel, à tous les doubtes et questions par vous proposées compete une seule solution, et à tous telz symptomates et accidents une seule medicine." (François Rabelais, Les Cinq Livres, La Pochothèque, 1994, p. 1193)
  67. ^ Macey, David, "On the subject of Lacan" in Psychoanalysis in Contexts: Paths between Theory and Modern Culture (London: Routledge 1995).
  68. ^ Fink, Bruce, The Lacanian Subject: Between Language and Jouissance (Princeton University Press, 1996), ISBN 978-0-691-01589-7
  69. ^ Lacan, J., The Seminar of Jacques Lacan: Book I: Freud's Papers on Technique 1953–1954(W. W. Norton & Company, 1988), ISBN 978-0-393-30697-2
  70. ^ Lacan, J., The Seminar of Jacques Lacan: Book II: The Ego in Freud's Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis 1954–1955(W. W. Norton & Company, 1988), ISBN 978-0-393-30709-2
  71. ^ Lacan, J., "The Direction of the Treatment and the Principles of Its Powers" in Écrits: A Selection translated by Bruce Fink (W. W. Norton & Company, 2004), ISBN 978-0393325287
  72. ^ a b Lacan, J., "The Signification of the Phallus" in Écrits
  73. ^ Žižek, Slavoj, The Plague of Fantasies (London: Verso 1997), p. 39.
  74. ^ Lacan, J. The Seminar: Book XI. The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis, 1964 (W. W. Norton & Company, 1998), ISBN 978-0393317756
  75. ^ Kojève, Alexandre, Introduction to the Reading of Hegel, translated by James H. Nichols Jr. (New York: Basic Books 1969), p. 39.
  76. ^ Lacan, J., Écrits: A Selection translated by Bruce Fink (W. W. Norton & Company, 2004), ISBN 978-0393325287
  77. ^ Lacan, J. The Seminar: Book VII. The Ethics of Psychoanalysis, 1959–1960 (W. W. Norton & Company, 1997), ISBN 978-0393316131
  78. ^ Lacan, J., "The Instance of the Letter in the Unconscious, or Reason since Freud" in Écrits: A Selection translated by Bruce Fink (W. W. Norton & Company, 2004), ISBN 978-0393325287
  79. ^ Lacan, J. Le Séminaire: Livre IV. La relation d'objet, 1956–1957 ed. Jacques-Alain Miller (Paris; Seuil, 1994)
  80. ^ a b c d e The Seminar, Book XI. The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis
  81. ^ Freud, Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, S.E. VII
  82. ^ Freud, Beyond the Pleasure Principle, S.E. XVIII
  83. ^ Position of the Unconscious, Ecrits
  84. ^ Slavoj Zizek, Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan Through Popular Culture
  85. ^ Jacques Lacan, Ecrits: A Selection (London 1997) p. 58 and p. 121
  86. ^ Jacques-Alain Miller, "Microscopia", in Jacques Lacan, Television (London 1990) p. xxvii
  87. ^ Bruce Fink, The Lacanian Subject (Princeton 1997) p. 173
  88. ^ a b Miller, p. xxvii
  89. ^ Seminar XXI, quoted in Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose eds., Feminine Sexuality (New York 1982) p. 51
  90. ^ Oliver Feltham, "Enjoy your Stay", in Justin Clemens/Russell Grigg, Jacques Lacan and the Other side of psychoanalysis (2006) p. 180
  91. ^ Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (London 1970) p. 175
  92. ^ John Forrester, 'Dead on Time: Lacan's Theory of Temporality' in: Forrester, The Seductions of Psychoanalysis: Freud, Lacan and Derrida Cambridge: C.U.P., pp. 169–218, 352–370
  93. ^ Janet Malcolm, Psychoanalysis: The Impossible Profession (London 1988) p. 4
  94. ^ Jacques Lacan, Écrits: A Selection (London 1996) p. 99
  95. ^ a b Bruce Fink, A Clinical Introduction to Lacananian Psychoanalysis: Theory and Technique (Newhaven: Harvard, 1996)
  96. ^ de Mijolla, Alain. . Société Psychanalytique de Paris. Archived from the original on 16 December 2008. Retrieved 8 April 2010.
  97. ^ Lacan, Jacques (4 July 1953). Letter to Rudolph Loewenstein. Vol. 40. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-262-75188-9. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  98. ^ Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen, Lacan: The Absolute Master (1991) p. 120
  99. ^ Cornélius Castoriadis, in Roudinesco (1997) p. 386
  100. ^ Sherry Turkle, Psychoanalytic Politics: Freud's French Revolution (London 1978) p. 204
  101. ^ David Macey, "Introduction", Jacques Lacan, The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis (London 1994) p. xiv and xxxv
  102. ^ R. Horacio Etchegoyen, The Fundamentals of Psychoanalytic Technique (London 2005) p. 677
  103. ^ Michael Parsons, The Dove that Returns, the Dove that Vanishes (London 2000) pp. 16–17
  104. ^ Julia Kristeva, Intimate Revolt (New York 2002) p. 42
  105. ^ a b Rabaté, Jean-Michel (2003), Rabaté, Jean-Michel (ed.), "Lacan's turn to Freud", The Cambridge Companion to Lacan, Cambridge Companions to Literature, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1–24, ISBN 978-0-521-80744-9, retrieved 26 May 2022
  106. ^ Élisabeth Roudinesco, Jacques Lacan (Malden: Polity Press, 1999), 11, 89, 98, 435.
  107. ^ Jacques Lacan, L'éthique de la psychanalyse: Séminaire VII (Paris : Seuil, 1986), 224-225.
  108. ^ Jacques Lacan, Le Triomphe de La Religion précédé de Discours aux Catholiques (Paris: Seuil, 2005), 65.
  109. ^ Abdesselem Rechak, Le grand secret de la psychanalyse (Mandeure: self-published, 2020).
  110. ^ David Macey, "Introduction", Jacques Lacan, The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-analysis (London 1994) p. x
  111. ^ Richard Stevens, Sigmund Freud: Examining the Essence of his Contribution (Basingstoke 2008) p. 191n
  112. ^ Yannis Stavrakakis, Lacan and the Political (London: Routledge, 1999) pp. 5–6
  113. ^ e.g. A Shining Affliction ISBN 978-0-14-024012-2
  114. ^ "Le 388".
  115. ^ Marta, Jan (1987). "Lacan and post-Structuralism". The American Journal of Psychoanalysis. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 47 (1): 51–57. doi:10.1007/bf01252332. ISSN 0002-9548. PMID 2437811. S2CID 21435280.
  116. ^ Lacan, Jacques (2001). Autres Ecrits [Other Writings] (in French). Seuil. ISBN 978-2020486477.
  117. ^ Onfray, Michel: "Erich Fromm et la psychanalyse humaniste" ("Erich Fromm and the humanist psychoanalysis"). Conference held in the Université populaire de Caen, transmitted on France Culture, 16 August 2011
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  119. ^ Turkle, Sherry (1978). Psychoanalytic Politics: Freud's French Revolution. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0465066070. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
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  121. ^ Jacqueline Rose, On Not Being Able To Sleep: Psychoanalysis and the Modern World (London 2003) p. 176
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  124. ^ Adam Phillips, On Flirtation (London, 1996), pp. 161–2.
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Further reading edit

Biographical works edit

Introductory texts edit

  • Benvenuto, B.; Kennedy, R. (1986). The Works of Jacques Lacan: An Introduction. London: Free Association Books. ISBN 9780946960200.
  • Bowie, Malcolm, (1991) Lacan London: Fontana.
  • Dor, Joel, (2001) Introduction to the Reading of Lacan: The Unconscious Structured Like a Language, New York: Other Press.
  • Evans, Dylan (1997). An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis. London: Routledge.
  • Grosz, Elizabeth. (1991) Jacques Lacan: a Feminist Introduction. London: Routledge.
  • Homer, S. (2005) Jacques Lacan. London: Routledge.
  • Leader, D. & Groves, J. (1995) Lacan for Beginners. London: Icon Books.
  • Lee, Jonathan Scott. (2002) Jacques Lacan. Amherst: The University of Massachusetts Press.
  • Neill, Calum (2023). Jacques Lacan: the Basics. Abington, Oxon: Routledge.

Textual commentaries edit

Écrits edit

  • Fink, Bruce. Lacan to the Letter: Reading Ecrits Closely. University of Minnesota Press, 2004.
  • Hook, D., Vanheule, S. & Neill, C. (eds.) (2019) Reading Lacan’s Écrits: From ‘The Freudian Thing’ to ‘Remarks on Daniel Lagache’. London: Routledge.
  • Hook, D., Vanheule, S. & Neill, C. (eds.) (2022) Reading Lacan’s Écrits: From ‘Logical Time’ to ‘Response to Jean Hyppolite’. London: Routledge.
  • Vanheule, S., Hook, D. & Neill, C. (eds.) (2018) Reading Lacan’s Écrits: From ‘Signification of the Phallus’ to ‘‘Metaphor of the Subject’. London: Routledge
  • Neill, C., Hook, D. & Vanheule, S. (eds.) (2023) Reading Lacan’s Écrits: From ‘Overture to This Collection’ to ‘Presentation on Psychical Causality’. London: Routledge.
  • Johnston, Adrian (2017). Irrepressible Truth: On Lacan's "The Freudian Thing". Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Muller, John P.; Richardson, William J. (1982). Lacan and Language: A Reader's Guide to Écrits. New York: International University Press.
  • Nobus, Dany (2022) The Law of Desire: On Lacan's 'Kant with Sade'. Cham: Palgrave MacMillan.

The Seminars edit

  • Cox Cameron, O. with Owens, C. (2021) Studying Lacan’s Seminar VI: Dream, Symptom, and the Collapse of Subjectivity. London. Routledge.
  • Owens, C. and Almqvist, N. (2019) Studying Lacan’s Seminars IV and V: From Lack to Desire. London. Routledge.
  • Feldstein, Richard; Jaanus, Maire; Fink, Bruce, eds. (1996). Reading seminars I and II: Lacan's return to Freud: seminar I, Freud's papers on technique, seminar II, the ego in Freud's theory and in the technique of psychoanalysis. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-2780-3. OCLC 42854739.
  • Feldstein, Richard; Jaanus, Maire; Fink, Bruce, eds. (1995). Reading Seminar XI: Lacan's Four fundamental concepts of psychoanalysis: the Paris seminars in English. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-2148-1. OCLC 42854927.
  • Feldstein, Richard; Jaanus, Maire; Fink, Bruce, eds. (2002). Reading Seminar XX: Lacan's major work on love, knowledge, and feminine sexuality. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-5432-0. OCLC 53275064.
  • Harari, Roberto, Lacan's Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis: An Introduction, New York: Other Press, 2004.
  • Harari, Roberto, Lacan's Seminar on "Anxiety": An Introduction, New York: Other Press, 2005.
  • Miller, Jacques-Alain, "Introduction to Reading Jacques Lacan's Seminar on Anxiety I", New York: Lacanian Ink 26, Fall 2005.
  • Miller, Jacques-Alain, "Introduction to Reading Jacques Lacan's Seminar on Anxiety II", New York: Lacanian Ink 27, Spring 2006.

General commentaries edit

  • Badiou, Alain, "The Formulas of l'Étourdit", New York: Lacanian Ink 27, Spring 2006.
  • Badiou, A. (2006). "Lacan and the Pre-Socratics". Lacan Dot Com.
  • Badiou, A.; Roudinesco, E.; Smith, J.E. (2014). Jacques Lacan, Past and Present: A Dialogue. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-16511-2.
  • Benvenuto, Sergio (2020). Conversations with Lacan: Seven Lectures for Understanding Lacan. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-367-14879-9. OCLC 1134622118.
  • Bracher, Mark; Massardier-Kenney, Françoise; Alcorn, Marshall W.; Corthell, Ronald J. (1994). Lacanian Theory of Discourse: Subject, Structure, and Society. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-1299-1.
  • Brennan, Teresa (1993). History after Lacan. London: Routledge
  • Dor, Joel (1999) The Clinical Lacan, New York: Other Press.
  • Felman, Shoshana (1987). Jacques Lacan and the Adventure of insight: Psychoanalysis in Contemporary Culture. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press.
  • Fink, Bruce (1996) The Lacanian Subject: Between Language and Jouissance Princeton University Press, 1996.
  • Fink, Bruce (1997) A Clinical Introduction to Lacanian Psychoanalysis: Theory and Technique. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Fink, Bruce (2014). Against Understanding, vol. 1: Commentary and Critique in a Lacanian Key. London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. ISBN 978-0-415-63543-1.
  • Forrester, John (1985) Language and the Origins of Psychoanalysis, Basingstoke and London: Macmillan.
  • Glynos, Jason and Stavrakakis, Yannis (eds) (2002). Lacan and Science. London: Karnac Books.
  • Hendrix, John Shannon (2006). Architecture and Psychoanalysis: Peter Eisenman and Jacques Lacan. New York: Peter Lang. ISBN 978-0-820481-71-5.
  • Johnston, Adrian (2005) Time Driven: Metapsychology and the Splitting of the Drive, Evanston: Northwestern University Press.
  • Kovacevic, Filip (2007) "Liberating Oedipus? Psychoanalysis as Critical Theory" Landham, MD: Lexington Books.
  • Macey, David (1988). Lacan in Contexts. London: Verso.
  • Mandal, Mahitosh (2018) Jacques Lacan: From Clinic to Culture. Hyderabad: Orient BlackSwan
  • McGowan, Todd and Sheila Kunkle Eds.(2004) Lacan and Contemporary Film, New York: Other Press.
  • Miller, Jacques-Alain, "Jacques Lacan's Later Teachings", New York: Spring Lacanian Ink 21, 2003.
  • Miller, Jacques-Alain, "The Paradigms of Jouissance" New York, Lacanian Ink 17, Fall 2000.
  • Miller, Jacques-Alain, "Suture: Elements of the Logic of the Signifier", Lacan Dot Com, The Symptom 2006.
  • Miller, Jacques-Alain, "Religion, Psychoanalysis", Lacanian Ink 23, Spring 2004.
  • Miller, Jacques-Alain, , Lacanian Ink 20, Spring 2002.
  • Miller, Jacques-Alain (2013). Applied Lacanian Psychoanalysis. Minneapolis London: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-8319-2. OCLC 842322946.
  • Nasio, Juan-David, Book of Love and Pain: The Thinking at the Limit with Freud and Lacan, transl. by David Pettigrew and Francois Raffoul, Albany: SUNY Press, 2003.
  • Nasio, Juan-David (1998) Five Lessons on the Psychoanalytic Theory of Jacques Lacan, Albany, SUNY Press.
  • Nasio, Juan-David (1999) Hysteria: The Splendid Child of Psychoanalysis. Translated by Susan Fairfield. New York: Other Press.
  • Neill, Calum (2014). Without Ground: Lacanian Ethics and the Assumptions of Subjectivity. London: Palgrave.
  • Nobus, Dany (ed.) (1999) Key Concepts of Lacanian Psychoanalysis. New York: Other Press.
  • Nobus, Dany (2022). Critique of Psychoanalytic Reason: Studies in Lacanian Theory and Practice. London: Routledge.
  • Parker, Ian (2011) Lacanian Psychoanalysis: Revolutions in Subjectivity. London: Routledge.
  • Pettigrew, David and François Raffoul (eds.), (1996) Disseminating Lacan, Albany: SUNY Press.
  • Rabaté, Jean-Michel (ed.), (2003) The Cambridge Companion to Lacan, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Rose, Jacqueline (1986) Sexuality in the Field of Vision. London: Verso.
  • Roudinesco, Élisabeth, 'Lucien Febvre à la rencontre de Jacques Lacan, Paris 1937'. with Peter Schöttler, Genèses, Année 1993, Vol.13, n°1.
  • Roudinesco, Elisabeth (1990) Jacques Lacan & Co.: a History of Psychoanalysis in France, 1925–1985. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
  • Roudinesco, Élisabeth, "Lacan, The Plague", Psychoanalysis and History, ed. John Forrester, Teddington, Artesian Books, 2008.
  • Safouan, Moustafa (2004) Four Lessons of Psychoanalysis, New York, Other Press.
  • Schneiderman, Stuart (1983) Jacques Lacan: the Death of an Intellectual Hero, Harvard University Press.
  • Soler, Colette (2006). What Lacan said about women: a psychoanalytic study. Translated by Holland, John. New York: Other Press. ISBN 978-1-59051-170-1. OCLC 58546399.
  • Stavrakakis, Yannis (2007) The Lacanian Left, Albany: State University of New York Press.
  • Turkle, Sherry and Wandollheim, Richard, 'Lacan: an exchange', New York Review of Books, 26 (9), 1979.
  • Žižek, Slavoj, "Jacques Lacan's Four Discourses", Lacan Dot Com, 2008.
  • Žižek, Slavoj, "Woman is One of the Names-of-the-Father, or how Not to misread Lacan´s formulas of sexuation", Lacan Dot Com, 2005.
  • Žižek, Slavoj, 'The object as a limit of discourse: approaches to the Lacanian real', Prose Studies, 11 (3), 1988, pp.  94–120.
  • Žižek, Slavoj, "Jacques Lacan as Reader of Hegel", New York, Lacanian Ink 27, Fall 2006.
  • Žižek, Slavoj, (2006) "How to Read Lacan London: Granta Books.

External links edit

jacques, lacan, lacan, redirects, here, other, uses, lacan, disambiguation, jacques, marie, Émile, lacan, ɑː, french, ʒak, maʁi, emil, lakɑ, april, 1901, september, 1981, french, psychoanalyst, psychiatrist, described, most, controversial, psycho, analyst, sin. Lacan redirects here For other uses see Lacan disambiguation Jacques Marie Emile Lacan UK l ae ˈ k ɒ 3 US l e ˈ k ɑː n 4 5 French ʒak maʁi emil lakɑ 13 April 1901 9 September 1981 was a French psychoanalyst and psychiatrist Described as the most controversial psycho analyst since Freud 6 Lacan gave yearly seminars in Paris from 1953 to 1981 and published papers that were later collected in the book Ecrits Transcriptions of his seminars given between 1954 and 1976 were also published 7 His work made a significant impact on continental philosophy and cultural theory in areas such as post structuralism critical theory feminist theory and film theory as well as on the practice of psychoanalysis itself Jacques LacanBorn 1901 04 13 13 April 1901Paris FranceDied9 September 1981 1981 09 09 aged 80 Paris FranceEducationCollege Stanislas 1907 1918 University of Paris SpDip 1931 2 M D 1932 Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolPsychoanalysisStructuralismPost structuralism 1 InstitutionsUniversity of Paris VIIIMain interestsPsychoanalysisNotable ideasMirror phaseThe RealThe SymbolicThe ImaginaryGraph of desireSplit subjectObjet petit aLacan took up and discussed the whole range of Freudian concepts emphasizing the philosophical dimension of Freud s thought and applying concepts derived from structuralism in linguistics and anthropology to its development in his own work which he would further augment by employing formulae from predicate logic and topology Taking this new direction and introducing controversial innovations in clinical practice led to expulsion for Lacan and his followers from the International Psychoanalytic Association 8 In consequence Lacan went on to establish new psychoanalytic institutions to promote and develop his work which he declared to be a return to Freud in opposition to prevalent trends in psychology and institutional psychoanalysis collusive of adaptation to social norms Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 1930s 1 3 1940s 1 4 1950s 1 5 1960s 1 6 1970s 1 7 Last years 2 Major concepts 2 1 Return to Freud 2 2 Mirror stage 2 3 Other 2 4 Phallus 2 5 Three orders plus one 2 5 1 The Imaginary 2 5 2 The Symbolic 2 5 3 The Real 2 5 4 The Sinthome 2 6 Desire 2 7 Drive 2 8 Other concepts 3 Lacan on error and knowledge 4 Clinical contributions 4 1 Variable length session 5 Writings and writing style 6 Legacy 7 Criticism 7 1 Theory of psychoanalysis 7 2 Therapeutic practice 7 3 Feminist criticism 7 4 Mathematics in psychoanalysis 7 5 Incomprehensibility 8 Works 9 See also 10 Footnotes 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 Biographical works 12 2 Introductory texts 12 3 Textual commentaries 12 3 1 Ecrits 12 3 2 The Seminars 12 4 General commentaries 13 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Lacan was born in Paris the eldest of Emilie and Alfred Lacan s three children His father was a successful soap and oils salesman His mother was ardently Catholic his younger brother entered a monastery in 1929 Lacan attended the College Stanislas between 1907 and 1918 An interest in philosophy led him to a preoccupation with the work of Spinoza one outcome of which was his abandonment of religious faith for atheism There were tensions in the family around this issue and he regretted not persuading his brother to take a different path but by 1924 his parents had moved to Boulogne and he was living in rooms in Montmartre 9 104 During the early 1920s Lacan actively engaged with the Parisian literary and artistic avant garde Having met James Joyce he was present at the Parisian bookshop where the first readings of passages from Ulysses in French and English took place shortly before it was published in 1922 10 He also had meetings with Charles Maurras whom he admired as a literary stylist and he occasionally attended meetings of Action Francaise of which Maurras was a leading ideologue 9 104 of which he would later be highly critical In 1920 after being rejected for military service on the grounds that he was too thin Lacan entered medical school Between 1927 and 1931 after completing his studies at the faculty of medicine of the University of Paris he specialised in psychiatry under the direction of Henri Claude at the Sainte Anne Hospital the major psychiatric hospital serving central Paris at the Infirmary for the Insane of the Police Prefecture under Gaetan Gatian de Clerambault and also at the Hospital Henri Rousselle 11 211 1930s edit Lacan was involved with the Parisian surrealist movement of the 1930s associating with Andre Breton Georges Bataille Salvador Dali and Pablo Picasso 12 For a time he served as Picasso s personal therapist He attended the mouvement Psyche that Maryse Choisy founded and published in the Surrealist journal Minotaure Lacan s interest in surrealism predated his interest in psychoanalysis former Lacanian analyst and biographer Dylan Evans explains speculating that perhaps Lacan never really abandoned his early surrealist sympathies its neo Romantic view of madness as convulsive beauty its celebration of irrationality 13 Translator and historian David Macey writes that the importance of surrealism can hardly be over stated to the young Lacan who also shared the surrealists taste for scandal and provocation and viewed provocation as an important element in psycho analysis itself 14 In 1931 after a second year at the Sainte Anne Hospital Lacan was awarded his Diplome de medecin legiste a medical examiner s qualification and became a licensed forensic psychiatrist The following year he was awarded his Diplome d Etat de docteur en medecine fr roughly equivalent to an M D degree for his thesis On Paranoiac Psychosis in its Relations to the Personality De la Psychose paranoiaque dans ses rapports avec la personnalite 15 11 21 a Its publication had little immediate impact on French psychoanalysis but it did meet with acclaim amongst Lacan s circle of surrealist writers and artists In their only recorded instance of direct communication Lacan sent a copy of his thesis to Sigmund Freud who acknowledged its receipt with a postcard 11 212 Lacan s thesis was based on observations of several patients with a primary focus on one female patient whom he called Aimee Its exhaustive reconstruction of her family history and social relations on which he based his analysis of her paranoid state of mind demonstrated his dissatisfaction with traditional psychiatry and the growing influence of Freud on his ideas 16 Also in 1932 Lacan published a translation of Freud s 1922 text Uber einige neurotische Mechanismen bei Eifersucht Paranoia und Homosexualitat Some Neurotic Mechanisms in Jealousy Paranoia and Homosexuality as De quelques mecanismes nevrotiques dans la jalousie la paranoia et l homosexualite in the Revue francaise de psychanalyse fr In Autumn 1932 Lacan began his training analysis with Rudolph Loewenstein which was to last until 1938 17 In 1934 Lacan became a candidate member of the Societe psychanalytique de Paris SPP He began his private psychoanalytic practice in 1936 whilst still seeing patients at the Sainte Anne Hospital 9 129 and the same year presented his first analytic report at the Congress of the International Psychoanalytical Association IPA in Marienbad on the Mirror Phase The congress chairman Ernest Jones terminated the lecture before its conclusion since he was unwilling to extend Lacan s stated presentation time Insulted Lacan left the congress to witness the Berlin Olympic Games No copy of the original lecture remains Lacan having decided not to hand in his text for publication in the conference proceedings 18 Lacan s attendance at Kojeve s lectures on Hegel given between 1933 and 1939 and which focused on the Phenomenology and the master slave dialectic in particular was formative for his subsequent work 11 96 98 initially in his formulation of his theory of the mirror phase for which he was also indebted to the experimental work on child development of Henri Wallon 9 143 It was Wallon who commissioned from Lacan the last major text of his pre war period a contribution to the 1938 Encyclopedie francaise entitled La Famille reprinted in 1984 as Les Complexes familiaux dans la formation de l individu Paris Navarin 1938 was also the year of Lacan s accession to full membership membre titulaire of the SPP notwithstanding considerable opposition from many of its senior members who were unimpressed by his recasting of Freudian theory in philosophical terms 9 122 Lacan married Marie Louise Blondin in January 1934 and in January 1937 they had the first of their three children a daughter named Caroline A son Thibaut was born in August 1939 and a daughter Sybille in November 1940 9 129 1940s edit The SPP was disbanded due to Nazi Germany s occupation of France in 1940 Lacan was called up for military service which he undertook in periods of duty at the Val de Grace military hospital in Paris whilst at the same time continuing his private psychoanalytic practice In 1942 he moved into apartments at 5 rue de Lille which he would occupy until his death During the war he did not publish any work turning instead to a study of Chinese for which he obtained a degree from the Ecole speciale des langues orientales 9 147 19 In a relationship they formed before the war Sylvia Bataille nee Makles the estranged wife of his friend Georges Bataille became Lacan s mistress and in 1953 his second wife During the war their relationship was complicated by the threat of deportation for Sylvia who was Jewish since this required her to live in the unoccupied territories Lacan intervened personally with the authorities to obtain papers detailing her family origins which he destroyed In 1941 they had a child Judith She kept the name Bataille because Lacan wished to delay the announcement of his planned separation and divorce until after the war 9 147 After the war the SPP recommenced their meetings In 1945 Lacan visited England for a five week study trip where he met the British analysts Ernest Jones Wilfred Bion and John Rickman Bion s analytic work with groups influenced Lacan contributing to his own subsequent emphasis on study groups as a structure within which to advance theoretical work in psychoanalysis He published a report of his visit as La Psychiatrique anglaise et la guerre Evolution psychiatrique 1 1947 pp 293 318 In 1949 Lacan presented a new paper on the mirror stage The Mirror Stage as Formative of the I as Revealed in Psychoanalytic Experience to the sixteenth IPA congress in Zurich The same year he set out in the Doctrine de la Commission de l Enseignement produced for the Training Commission of the SPP the protocols for the training of candidates 11 220 221 1950s edit With the purchase in 1951 of a country mansion at Guitrancourt Lacan established a base for weekend retreats for work leisure including extravagant social occasions and for the accommodation of his vast library His art collection included Courbet s L Origine du monde which he had concealed in his study by a removable wooden screen on which an abstract representation of the Courbet by the artist Andre Masson was portrayed 9 294 In 1951 Lacan started to hold a private weekly seminar in Paris in which he inaugurated what he described as a return to Freud whose doctrines were to be re articulated through a reading of Saussure s linguistics and Levi Strauss s structuralist anthropology Becoming public in 1953 Lacan s 27 year long seminar was highly influential in Parisian cultural life as well as in psychoanalytic theory and clinical practice 9 299 In January 1953 Lacan was elected president of the SPP When at a meeting the following June a formal motion was passed against him criticising his abandonment of the standard analytic training session for the variable length session he immediately resigned his presidency He and a number of colleagues then resigned from the SPP to form the Societe Francaise de Psychanalyse SFP 11 227 One consequence of this was to eventually deprive the new group of membership of the International Psychoanalytical Association Encouraged by the reception of the return to Freud and of his report The Function and Field of Speech and Language in Psychoanalysis Lacan began to re read Freud s works in relation to contemporary philosophy linguistics ethnology biology and topology From 1953 to 1964 at the Sainte Anne Hospital he held his Seminars and presented case histories of patients During this period he wrote the texts that are found in the collection Ecrits which was first published in 1966 In his seventh seminar The Ethics of Psychoanalysis 1959 60 which according to Lewis A Kirshner arguably represents the most far reaching attempt to derive a comprehensive ethical position from psychoanalysis 20 Lacan defined the ethical foundations of psychoanalysis and presented his ethics for our time one that would in the words of Freud prove to be equal to the tragedy of modern man and to the discontent of civilization At the roots of the ethics is desire the only promise of analysis is austere it is the entrance into the I in French a play on words between l entree en je and l entree en jeu I must come to the place where the id was where the analysand discovers in its absolute nakedness the truth of his desire The end of psychoanalysis entails the purification of desire He defended three assertions that psychoanalysis must have a scientific status that Freudian ideas have radically changed the concepts of subject of knowledge and of desire and that the analytic field is the only place from which it is possible to question the insufficiencies of science and philosophy 21 1960s edit Starting in 1962 a complex negotiation took place to determine the status of the SFP within the IPA Lacan s practice with its controversial indeterminate length sessions and his critical stance towards psychoanalytic orthodoxy led in August 1963 to the IPA setting the condition that registration of the SFP was dependent upon the removal of Lacan from the list of SFP analysts 22 With the SFP s decision to honour this request in November 1963 Lacan had effectively been stripped of the right to conduct training analyses and thus was constrained to form his own institution in order to accommodate the many candidates who desired to continue their analyses with him This he did on 21 June 1964 in the Founding Act 23 of what became known as the Ecole Freudienne de Paris EFP taking many representatives of the third generation with him among them were Maud and Octave Mannoni Serge Leclaire and Jean Clavreul 24 293 With the support of Claude Levi Strauss and Louis Althusser Lacan was appointed lecturer at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes He started with a seminar on The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis in January 1964 in the Dussane room at the Ecole Normale Superieure Lacan began to set forth his own approach to psychoanalysis to an audience of colleagues that had joined him from the SFP His lectures also attracted many of the Ecole Normale s students He divided the Ecole Freudienne de Paris into three sections the section of pure psychoanalysis training and elaboration of the theory where members who have been analyzed but have not become analysts can participate the section for applied psychoanalysis therapeutic and clinical physicians who either have not started or have not yet completed analysis are welcome and the section for taking inventory of the Freudian field concerning the critique of psychoanalytic literature and the analysis of the theoretical relations with related or affiliated sciences 25 In 1967 he invented the procedure of the Pass which was added to the statutes after being voted in by the members of the EFP the following year 1966 saw the publication of Lacan s collected writings the Ecrits compiled with an index of concepts by Jacques Alain Miller Printed by the prestigious publishing house Editions du Seuil the Ecrits did much to establish Lacan s reputation to a wider public The success of the publication led to a subsequent two volume edition in 1969 By the 1960s Lacan was associated at least in the public mind with the far left in France 26 In May 1968 Lacan voiced his sympathy for the student protests and as a corollary his followers set up a Department of Psychology at the University of Vincennes Paris VIII However Lacan s unequivocal comments in 1971 on revolutionary ideals in politics draw a sharp line between the actions of some of his followers and his own style of revolt 27 In 1969 Lacan moved his public seminars to the Faculte de Droit Pantheon where he continued to deliver his expositions of analytic theory and practice until the dissolution of his school in 1980 1970s edit Throughout the final decade of his life Lacan continued his widely followed seminars During this period he developed his concepts of masculine and feminine jouissance and placed an increased emphasis on the concept of the Real as a point of impossible contradiction in the symbolic order Lacan continued to draw widely on various disciplines working closely on classical Chinese literature with Francois Cheng 28 29 and on the life and work of James Joyce with Jacques Aubert 30 The growing success of the Ecrits which was translated in abridged form into German and English led to invitations to lecture in Italy Japan and the United States He gave lectures in 1975 at Yale Columbia and MIT 31 Last years edit Lacan s failing health made it difficult for him to meet the demands of the year long Seminars he had been delivering since the fifties but his teaching continued into the first year of the eighties After dissolving his School the EFP in January 1980 32 Lacan travelled to Caracas to found the Freudian Field Institute on 12 July 33 The Overture to the Caracas Encounter was to be Lacan s final public address His last texts from the spring of 1981 are brief institutional documents pertaining to the newly formed Freudian Field Institute Lacan died on 9 September 1981 34 Major concepts editReturn to Freud edit Lacan s return to Freud emphasizes a renewed attention to the original texts of Freud and included a radical critique of ego psychology whereas Lacan s quarrel with Object Relations psychoanalysis 35 25 was a more muted affair Here he attempted to restore to the notion of the Object Relation the capital of experience that legitimately belongs to it 36 building upon what he termed the hesitant but controlled work of Melanie Klein Through her we know the function of the imaginary primordial enclosure formed by the imago of the mother s body 37 as well as upon the notion of the transitional object introduced by D W Winnicott a key point for the explanation of the genesis of fetishism 38 Nevertheless Lacan systematically questioned those psychoanalytic developments from the 1930s to the 1970s which were increasingly and almost exclusively focused on the child s early relations with the mother the pre Oedipal or Kleinian mother 39 and Lacan s rereading of Freud characteristically Lacan insists that his return to Freud supplies the only valid model 40 formed a basic conceptual starting point in that oppositional strategy Lacan thought that Freud s ideas of slips of the tongue jokes and the interpretation of dreams all emphasized the agency of language in subjects own constitution of themselves In The Instance of the Letter in the Unconscious or Reason Since Freud he proposes that the psychoanalytic experience discovers in the unconscious the whole structure of language The unconscious is not a primitive or archetypal part of the mind separate from the conscious linguistic ego he explained but rather a formation as complex and structurally sophisticated as consciousness itself Lacan is associated with the idea that the unconscious is structured like a language but the first time this sentence occurs in his work 41 he clarifies that he means that both the unconscious and language are structured not that they share a single structure and that the structure of language is such that the subject cannot necessarily be equated with the speaker This results in the self being denied any point of reference to which to be restored following trauma or a crisis of identity Andre Green objected that when you read Freud it is obvious that this proposition doesn t work for a minute Freud very clearly opposes the unconscious which he says is constituted by thing presentations and nothing else to the pre conscious What is related to language can only belong to the pre conscious 35 5n Freud certainly contrasted the presentation of the word and the presentation of the thing the unconscious presentation is the presentation of the thing alone 42 in his metapsychology Dylan Evans however in his Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis takes issue with those who like Andre Green question the linguistic aspect of the unconscious emphasizing Lacan s distinction between das Ding and die Sache in Freud s account of thing presentation 35 8n Green s criticism of Lacan also included accusations of intellectual dishonesty he said He cheated everybody the return to Freud was an excuse it just meant going to Lacan 43 Mirror stage edit Main article Mirror stage Lacan s first official contribution to psychoanalysis was the mirror stage which he described as formative of the function of the I as revealed in psychoanalytic experience By the early 1950s he came to regard the mirror stage as more than a moment in the life of the infant instead it formed part of the permanent structure of subjectivity In the imaginary order the subject s own image permanently catches and captivates the subject Lacan explains that the mirror stage is a phenomenon to which I assign a twofold value In the first place it has historical value as it marks a decisive turning point in the mental development of the child In the second place it typifies an essential libidinal relationship with the body image 44 As this concept developed further the stress fell less on its historical value and more on its structural value 45 In his fourth seminar La relation d objet Lacan states that the mirror stage is far from a mere phenomenon which occurs in the development of the child It illustrates the conflictual nature of the dual relationship The mirror stage describes the formation of the ego via the process of objectification the ego being the result of a conflict between one s perceived visual appearance and one s emotional experience This identification is what Lacan called alienation At six months the baby still lacks physical co ordination The child is able to recognize itself in a mirror prior to the attainment of control over their bodily movements The child sees its image as a whole and the synthesis of this image produces a sense of contrast with the lack of co ordination of the body which is perceived as a fragmented body The child experiences this contrast initially as a rivalry with its image because the wholeness of the image threatens the child with fragmentation thus the mirror stage gives rise to an aggressive tension between the subject and the image To resolve this aggressive tension the child identifies with the image this primary identification with the counterpart forms the ego 45 Lacan understood this moment of identification as a moment of jubilation since it leads to an imaginary sense of mastery yet when the child compares its own precarious sense of mastery with the omnipotence of the mother a depressive reaction may accompany the jubilation 46 Lacan calls the specular image orthopaedic since it leads the child to anticipate the overcoming of its real specific prematurity of birth The vision of the body as integrated and contained in opposition to the child s actual experience of motor incapacity and the sense of his or her body as fragmented induces a movement from insufficiency to anticipation 47 In other words the mirror image initiates and then aids like a crutch the process of the formation of an integrated sense of self In the mirror stage a misunderstanding meconnaissance constitutes the ego the me moi becomes alienated from itself through the introduction of an imaginary dimension to the subject The mirror stage also has a significant symbolic dimension due to the presence of the figure of the adult who carries the infant Having jubilantly assumed the image as their own the child turns their head towards this adult who represents the big other as if to call on the adult to ratify this image 48 Other edit While Freud uses the term other referring to der Andere the other person and das Andere otherness Lacan influenced by the seminar of Alexandre Kojeve theorizes alterity in a manner more closely resembling Hegel s philosophy Lacan often used an algebraic symbology for his concepts the big other l Autre is designated A and the little other l autre is designated a 49 He asserts that an awareness of this distinction is fundamental to analytic practice the analyst must be imbued with the difference between A and a so he can situate himself in the place of Other and not the other 45 135 Dylan Evans explains that The little other is the other who is not really other but a reflection and projection of the ego Evans adds that for this reason the symbol a can represent both the little other and the ego in the schema L 50 It is simultaneously the counterpart and the specular image The little other is thus entirely inscribed in the imaginary order The big other designates radical alterity an other ness which transcends the illusory otherness of the imaginary because it cannot be assimilated through identification Lacan equates this radical alterity with language and the law and hence the big other is inscribed in the order of the symbolic Indeed the big other is the symbolic insofar as it is particularized for each subject The other is thus both another subject in its radical alterity and unassimilable uniqueness and also the symbolic order which mediates the relationship with that other subject 51 For Lacan the Other must first of all be considered a locus in which speech is constituted so that the other as another subject is secondary to the other as symbolic order 52 We can speak of the other as a subject in a secondary sense only when a subject occupies this position and thereby embodies the other for another subject 53 In arguing that speech originates in neither the ego nor in the subject but rather in the other Lacan stresses that speech and language are beyond the subject s conscious control They come from another place outside of consciousness the unconscious is the discourse of the Other 54 When conceiving the other as a place Lacan refers to Freud s concept of psychical locality in which the unconscious is described as the other scene It is the mother who first occupies the position of the big Other for the child Dylan Evans explains it is she who receives the child s primitive cries and retroactively sanctions them as a particular message 45 The castration complex is formed when the child discovers that this other is not complete because there is a lack manque in the other This means that there is always a signifier missing from the trove of signifiers constituted by the other Lacan illustrates this incomplete other graphically by striking a bar through the symbol A hence another name for the castrated incomplete other is the barred other 55 Phallus edit Feminist thinkers have both utilised and criticised Lacan s concepts of castration and the phallus Feminists such as Avital Ronell Jane Gallop 56 and Elizabeth Grosz 57 have interpreted Lacan s work as opening up new possibilities for feminist theory Some feminists have argued that Lacan s phallocentric analysis provides a useful means of understanding gender biases and imposed roles while others most notably Luce Irigaray accuse Lacan of maintaining the sexist tradition in psychoanalysis 58 For Irigaray the phallus does not define a single axis of gender by its presence or absence instead gender has two positive poles Like Irigaray French philosopher Jacques Derrida in criticizing Lacan s concept of castration discusses the phallus in a chiasmus with the hymen as both one and other 59 60 Three orders plus one edit Lacan considered psychic functions to occur within a universal matrix The Real Imaginary and Symbolic are properties of this matrix which make up part of every psychic function This is not analogous to Freud s concept of id ego and superego since in Freud s model certain functions take place within components of the psyche while Lacan thought that all three orders were part of every function Lacan refined the concept of the orders over decades resulting in inconsistencies in his writings He eventually added a fourth component the sinthome 61 77 The Imaginary edit Main article The Imaginary psychoanalysis The Imaginary is the field of images and imagination The main illusions of this order are synthesis autonomy duality and resemblance Lacan thought that the relationship created within the mirror stage between the ego and the reflected image means that the ego and the Imaginary order itself are places of radical alienation alienation is constitutive of the Imaginary order 62 This relationship is also narcissistic In The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis Lacan argues that the Symbolic order structures the visual field of the Imaginary which means that it involves a linguistic dimension If the signifier is the foundation of the symbolic the signified and signification are part of the Imaginary order Language has symbolic and Imaginary connotations in its Imaginary aspect language is the wall of language that inverts and distorts the discourse of the Other The Imaginary however is rooted in the subject s relationship with his or her own body the image of the body In Fetishism the Symbolic the Imaginary and the Real Lacan argues that in the sexual plane the Imaginary appears as sexual display and courtship love Insofar as identification with the analyst is the objective of analysis Lacan accused major psychoanalytic schools of reducing the practice of psychoanalysis to the Imaginary order 63 Instead Lacan proposes the use of the symbolic to dislodge the disabling fixations of the Imaginary the analyst transforms the images into words The use of the Symbolic he argued is the only way for the analytic process to cross the plane of identification 64 The Symbolic edit Main article The Symbolic In his Seminar IV La relation d objet Lacan argues that the concepts of Law and Structure are unthinkable without language thus the Symbolic is a linguistic dimension This order is not equivalent to language however since language involves the Imaginary and the Real as well The dimension proper to language in the Symbolic is that of the signifier that is a dimension in which elements have no positive existence but which are constituted by virtue of their mutual differences The Symbolic is also the field of radical alterity that is the Other the unconscious is the discourse of this Other It is the realm of the Law that regulates desire in the Oedipus complex The Symbolic is the domain of culture as opposed to the Imaginary order of nature As important elements in the Symbolic the concepts of death and lack manque connive to make of the pleasure principle the regulator of the distance from the Thing in German das Ding an sich and the death drive that goes beyond the pleasure principle by means of repetition the death drive is only a mask of the Symbolic order 49 By working in the Symbolic order the analyst is able to produce changes in the subjective position of the person undergoing psychoanalysis These changes will produce imaginary effects because the Imaginary is structured by the Symbolic 45 The Real edit Main article The Real Lacan s concept of the Real dates back to 1936 and his doctoral thesis on psychosis It was a term that was popular at the time particularly with Emile Meyerson who referred to it as an ontological absolute a true being in itself 45 162 Lacan returned to the theme of the Real in 1953 and continued to develop it until his death The Real for Lacan is not synonymous with reality Not only opposed to the Imaginary the Real is also exterior to the Symbolic Unlike the latter which is constituted in terms of oppositions i e presence absence there is no absence in the Real 49 Whereas the Symbolic opposition presence absence implies the possibility that something may be missing from the Symbolic the Real is always in its place 64 If the Symbolic is a set of differentiated elements signifiers the Real in itself is undifferentiated it bears no fissure The Symbolic introduces a cut in the real in the process of signification it is the world of words that creates the world of things things originally confused in the here and now of the all in the process of coming into being 65 The Real is that which is outside language and that resists symbolization absolutely In Seminar XI Lacan defines the Real as the impossible because it is impossible to imagine impossible to integrate into the Symbolic and impossible to attain It is this resistance to symbolization that lends the Real its traumatic quality Finally the Real is the object of anxiety insofar as it lacks any possible mediation and is the essential object which is not an object any longer but this something faced with which all words cease and all categories fail the object of anxiety par excellence 49 The Sinthome edit Main article Sinthome The term sinthome French sɛ tom was introduced by Jacques Lacan in his seminar Le sinthome 1975 76 According to Lacan sinthome is the Latin way 1495 Rabelais IV 63 66 of spelling the Greek origin of the French word symptome meaning symptom The seminar is a continuing elaboration of his topology extending the previous seminar s focus RSI on the Borromean Knot and an exploration of the writings of James Joyce Lacan redefines the psychoanalytic symptom in terms of his topology of the subject In Psychoanalysis and its Teachings Ecrits Lacan views the symptom as inscribed in a writing process not as ciphered message which was the traditional notion In his seminar L angoisse 1962 63 he states that the symptom does not call for interpretation in itself it is not a call to the Other but a pure jouissance addressed to no one This is a shift from the linguistic definition of the symptom as a signifier to his assertion that the symptom can only be defined as the way in which each subject enjoys jouit the unconscious in so far as the unconscious determines the subject He goes from conceiving the symptom as a message which can be deciphered by reference to the unconscious structured like a language to seeing it as the trace of the particular modality of the subject s jouissance Desire edit Lacan s concept of desire is related to Hegel s Begierde a term that implies a continuous force and therefore somehow differs from Freud s concept of Wunsch 67 Lacan s desire refers always to unconscious desire because it is unconscious desire that forms the central concern of psychoanalysis The aim of psychoanalysis is to lead the analysand to recognize his her desire and by doing so to uncover the truth about his her desire However this is possible only if desire is articulated in speech 68 It is only once it is formulated named in the presence of the other that desire appears in the full sense of the term 69 And again in The Ego in Freud s Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis what is important is to teach the subject to name to articulate to bring desire into existence The subject should come to recognize and to name her his desire But it isn t a question of recognizing something that could be entirely given In naming it the subject creates brings forth a new presence in the world 70 The truth about desire is somehow present in discourse although discourse is never able to articulate the entire truth about desire whenever discourse attempts to articulate desire there is always a leftover or surplus 71 Lacan distinguishes desire from need and from demand Need is a biological instinct where the subject depends on the Other to satisfy its own needs in order to get the Other s help need must be articulated in demand But the presence of the Other not only ensures the satisfaction of the need it also represents the Other s love Consequently demand acquires a double function on the one hand it articulates need and on the other acts as a demand for love Even after the need articulated in demand is satisfied the demand for love remains unsatisfied since the Other cannot provide the unconditional love that the subject seeks Desire is neither the appetite for satisfaction nor the demand for love but the difference that results from the subtraction of the first from the second 72 Desire is a surplus a leftover produced by the articulation of need in demand desire begins to take shape in the margin in which demand becomes separated from need 72 Unlike need which can be satisfied desire can never be satisfied it is constant in its pressure and eternal The attainment of desire does not consist in being fulfilled but in its reproduction as such As Slavoj Zizek puts it desire s raison d etre is not to realize its goal to find full satisfaction but to reproduce itself as desire 73 Lacan also distinguishes between desire and the drives desire is one and drives are many The drives are the partial manifestations of a single force called desire 74 Lacan s concept of objet petit a is the object of desire although this object is not that towards which desire tends but rather the cause of desire Desire is not a relation to an object but a relation to a lack manque In The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis Lacan argues that man s desire is the desire of the Other This entails the following Desire is the desire of the Other s desire meaning that desire is the object of another s desire and that desire is also desire for recognition Here Lacan follows Alexandre Kojeve who follows Hegel for Kojeve the subject must risk his own life if he wants to achieve the desired prestige 75 This desire to be the object of another s desire is best exemplified in the Oedipus complex when the subject desires to be the phallus of the mother In The Subversion of the Subject and the Dialectic of Desire in the Freudian Unconscious 76 Lacan contends that the subject desires from the point of view of another whereby the object of someone s desire is an object desired by another one what makes the object desirable is that it is precisely desired by someone else Again Lacan follows Kojeve who follows Hegel This aspect of desire is present in hysteria for the hysteric is someone who converts another s desire into his her own see Sigmund Freud s Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria in SE VII where Dora desires Frau K because she identifies with Herr K What matters then in the analysis of a hysteric is not to find out the object of her desire but to discover the subject with whom she identifies Desir de l Autre which is translated as desire for the Other though it could also be desire of the Other The fundamental desire is the incestuous desire for the mother the primordial Other 77 Desire is the desire for something else since it is impossible to desire what one already has The object of desire is continually deferred which is why desire is a metonymy 78 Desire appears in the field of the Other that is in the unconscious Last but not least for Lacan the first person who occupies the place of the Other is the mother and at first the child is at her mercy Only when the father articulates desire with the Law by castrating the mother is the subject liberated from desire for the mother 79 Drive edit Lacan maintains Freud s distinction between drive Trieb and instinct Instinkt Drives differ from biological needs because they can never be satisfied and do not aim at an object but rather circle perpetually around it He argues that the purpose of the drive Triebziel is not to reach a goal but to follow its aim meaning the way itself instead of the final destination that is to circle around the object The purpose of the drive is to return to its circular path and the true source of jouissance is the repetitive movement of this closed circuit 80 Lacan posits drives as both cultural and symbolic constructs to him the drive is not a given something archaic primordial 80 He incorporates the four elements of drives as defined by Freud pressure end object and source to his theory of the drive s circuit the drive originates in the erogenous zone circles round the object and returns to the erogenous zone Three grammatical voices structure this circuit the active voice to see the reflexive voice to see oneself the passive voice to be seen The active and reflexive voices are autoerotic they lack a subject It is only when the drive completes its circuit with the passive voice that a new subject appears implying that prior to that instance there was no subject 80 Despite being the passive voice the drive is essentially active to make oneself be seen rather than to be seen The circuit of the drive is the only way for the subject to transgress the pleasure principle To Freud sexuality is composed of partial drives i e the oral or the anal drives each specified by a different erotogenic zone At first these partial drives function independently i e the polymorphous perversity of children it is only in puberty that they become organized under the aegis of the genital organs 81 Lacan accepts the partial nature of drives but 1 he rejects the notion that partial drives can ever attain any complete organization the primacy of the genital zone if achieved is always precarious and 2 he argues that drives are partial in that they represent sexuality only partially and not in the sense that they are a part of the whole Drives do not represent the reproductive function of sexuality but only the dimension of jouissance 80 Lacan identifies four partial drives the oral drive the erogenous zones are the lips the partial object the breast the verb is to suck the anal drive the anus and the faeces to shit the scopic drive the eyes and the gaze to see and the invocatory drive the ears and the voice to hear The first two drives relate to demand and the last two to desire The notion of dualism is maintained throughout Freud s various reformulations of the drive theory From the initial opposition between sexual drives and ego drives self preservation to the final opposition between the life drives Lebenstriebe and the death drives Todestriebe 82 Lacan retains Freud s dualism but in terms of an opposition between the symbolic and the imaginary and not referred to different kinds of drives For Lacan all drives are sexual drives and every drive is a death drive pulsion de mort since every drive is excessive repetitive and destructive 83 The drives are closely related to desire since both originate in the field of the subject 80 But they are not to be confused drives are the partial aspects in which desire is realized desire is one and undivided whereas the drives are its partial manifestations A drive is a demand that is not caught up in the dialectical mediation of desire drive is a mechanical insistence that is not ensnared in demand s dialectical mediation 84 Other concepts edit Name of the Father Foreclosure psychoanalysis Lack manque Objet petit a The graph of desire Matheme Sinthome The Four discoursesLacan on error and knowledge editBuilding on Freud s The Psychopathology of Everyday Life Lacan long argued that every unsuccessful act is a successful not to say well turned discourse highlighting as well sudden transformations of errors into truths which seemed to be due to nothing more than perseverance 85 In a late seminar he generalised more fully the psychoanalytic discovery of truth arising from misunderstanding so as to maintain that the subject is naturally erring discourse structures alone give him his moorings and reference points signs identify and orient him if he neglects forgets or loses them he is condemned to err anew 86 Because of the alienation to which speaking beings are subjected due to their being in language 87 to survive one must let oneself be taken in by signs and become the dupe of a discourse of fictions organized in to a discourse 88 For Lacan with masculine knowledge irredeemably an erring 89 the individual must thus allow himself to be fooled by these signs to have a chance of getting his bearings amidst them he must place and maintain himself in the wake of a discourse become the dupe of a discourse les non dupes errent 88 Lacan comes close here to one of the points where very occasionally he sounds like Thomas Kuhn whom he never mentions 90 with Lacan s discourse resembling Kuhn s paradigm seen as the entire constellation of beliefs values techniques and so on shared by the members of a given community 91 Clinical contributions editVariable length session edit The variable length psychoanalytic session was one of Lacan s crucial clinical innovations 92 and a key element in his conflicts with the IPA to whom his innovation of reducing the fifty minute analytic hour to a Delphic seven or eight minutes or sometimes even to a single oracular parole murmured in the waiting room 93 was unacceptable Lacan s variable length sessions lasted anywhere from a few minutes or even if deemed appropriate by the analyst a few seconds to several hours citation needed This practice replaced the classical Freudian fifty minute hour With respect to what he called the cutting up of the timing Lacan asked the question Why make an intervention impossible at this point which is consequently privileged in this way 94 By allowing the analyst s intervention on timing the variable length session removed the patient s former certainty as to the length of time that they would be on the couch 95 18 When Lacan adopted the practice the psychoanalytic establishment were scandalized 95 17 96 and given that between 1979 and 1980 he saw an average of ten patients an hour it is perhaps not hard to see why Psychoanalysis was reduced to zero 24 397 though the treatments were no less lucrative At the time of his original innovation Lacan described the issue as concerning the systematic use of shorter sessions in certain analyses and in particular in training analyses 97 and in practice it was certainly a shortening of the session around the so called critical moment 98 which took place so that critics wrote that everyone is well aware what is meant by the deceptive phrase variable length sessions systematically reduced to just a few minutes 99 Irrespective of the theoretical merits of breaking up patients expectations it was clear that the Lacanian analyst never wants to shake up the routine by keeping them for more rather than less time 100 Lacan s shorter sessions enabled him to take many more clients than therapists using orthodox Freudian methods and this growth continued as Lacan s students and followers adopted the same practice 101 Accepting the importance of the critical moment when insight arises 102 object relations theory would nonetheless suggest that if the analyst does not provide the patient with space in which nothing needs to happen there is no space in which something can happen 103 Julia Kristeva would concur that Lacan alert to the scandal of the timeless intrinsic to the analytic experience was mistaken in wanting to ritualize it as a technique of scansion short sessions 104 Writings and writing style editAccording to Jean Michel Rabate Lacan in the mid 1950s classed the seminars as commentaries on Freud rather than presentations of his own doctrine like the writings while Lacan by 1971 placed the most value on his teaching and the interactive space of his seminar in contrast to Sigmund Freud Rabate also argued that from 1964 onward the seminars include original ideas However Rabate also wrote that the seminars are more problematic because of the importance of the interactive performances and because they were partly edited and rewritten 105 Most of Lacan s psychoanalytic writings from the 1940s through to the early 1960s were compiled with an index of concepts by Jacques Alain Miller in the 1966 collection titled simply Ecrits Published in French by Editions du Seuil they were later issued as a two volume set 1970 1 with a new Preface A selection of the writings chosen by Lacan himself were translated by Alan Sheridan and published by Tavistock Press in 1977 The full 35 text volume appeared for the first time in English in Bruce Fink s translation published by Norton amp Co 2006 The Ecrits were included on the list of 100 most influential books of the 20th century compiled and polled by the broadsheet Le Monde Lacan s writings from the late sixties and seventies thus subsequent to the 1966 collection were collected posthumously along with some early texts from the nineteen thirties in the Editions du Seuil volume Autres ecrits 2001 Although most of the texts in Ecrits and Autres ecrits are closely related to Lacan s lectures or lessons from his Seminar more often than not the style is denser than Lacan s oral delivery and a clear distinction between the writings and the transcriptions of the oral teaching is evident to the reader An often neglected aspect of Lacan s oral and writing style is his influence from his colleague and personal friend Henry Corbin who introduced Lacan to the thought of Ibn Arabi 106 107 108 Both Lacan and Ibn Arabi share nearly identical ideas and writing styles according to the researcher Abdesselem Rechak 109 Jacques Alain Miller is the sole editor of Lacan s seminars which contain the majority of his life s work There has been considerable controversy over the accuracy or otherwise of the transcription and editing as well as over Miller s refusal to allow any critical or annotated edition to be published 110 Despite Lacan s status as a major figure in the history of psychoanalysis some of his seminars remain unpublished Since 1984 Miller has been regularly conducting a series of lectures L orientation lacanienne Miller s teachings have been published in the US by the journal Lacanian Ink Lacan s writing is notoriously difficult due in part to the repeated Hegelian Kojevean allusions wide theoretical divergences from other psychoanalytic and philosophical theory and an obscure prose style For some the impenetrability of Lacan s prose is too often regarded as profundity precisely because it cannot be understood 111 Arguably at least the imitation of his style by other Lacanian commentators has resulted in an obscurantist antisystematic tradition in Lacanian literature 112 Although Lacan is a major influence on psychoanalysis in France and parts of Latin America in the English speaking world his influence on clinical psychology has been far less and his ideas are best known in the arts and humanities However there are Lacanian psychoanalytic societies in both North America and the United Kingdom that carry on his work 45 One example of Lacan s work being practiced in the United States is found in the works of Annie G Rogers A Shining Affliction The Unsayable The Hidden Language of Trauma which credit Lacanian theory for many therapeutic insights in successfully treating sexually abused young women 113 Lacan s work has also reached Quebec where The Interdisciplinary Freudian Group for Research and Clinical and Cultural Interventions GIFRIC claims that it has used a modified form of Lacanian psychoanalysis in successfully treating psychosis in many of its patients a task once thought to be unsuited for psychoanalysis even by psychoanalysts themselves 114 Legacy editIn his introduction to the 1994 Penguin edition of Lacan s The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho Analysis translator and historian David Macey describes Lacan as the most controversial psycho analyst since Freud 6 His ideas had a significant impact on post structuralism critical theory French philosophy film theory and clinical psychoanalysis 115 In 2003 Rabate described The Freudian Thing 1956 as one of his most important and programmatic essays 105 Criticism editTheory of psychoanalysis edit Social psychologist psychoanalyst and humanistic philosopher Erich Fromm rejected Lacan s view on psychonalysis whereby true psychoanalysis is founded on the relation between man and talk parole 116 and denounced the reduction of analysis to a pure and simple exchange of words arguing that the relation is instead about an exchange of signs Fromm supports clarity and unambiguity in the communication with others autrui and opposes the Lacanian wordplay that is associated with the provision of meaning 117 Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalyst Elisabeth Roudinesco in her biography of Lacan writes that some writings of her subject were incomprehensible also to Maurice Merleau Ponty 118 206 Claude Levi Strauss 118 305 and Martin Heidegger 118 306 Former Lacan student Didier Anzieu in a 1967 article titled Against Lacan described him as a danger because he kept his students tied to an unending dependence on an idol a logic or a language by holding out the promise of fundamental truths to be revealed but always at some further point and only to those who continued to travel with him According to Sherry Turkle these attitudes are representative of how most members of the Association talk about Lacan b 119 By 1977 Lacan was declaring that he was not too keen pas chaud chaud to claim that when one practices psychoanalysis one knows where one goes stating that psychoanalysis like every other human activity undoubtedly participates in abuse One does as if one knows something 120 Lacan s charismatic authority has been linked to the many conflicts among his followers and in the analytic schools he was involved with 121 His intellectual style has also come in for much criticism Eclectic in his use of sources 122 Lacan has been seen as concealing his own thought behind the apparent explication of that of others 24 46 Thus his return to Freud was called by Malcolm Bowie a complete pattern of dissenting assent to the ideas of Freud Lacan s argument is conducted on Freud s behalf and at the same time against him 123 Bowie has also suggested that Lacan suffered from both a love of system and a deep seated opposition to all forms of system 124 Therapeutic practice edit Lacan in his psychoanalytic practice came to hold sessions of diminishing duration 125 Eventually Lacan s student relates they often lasted no more than five minutes held sometimes with Lacan standing in the typically open door of the room c According to Godin Lacan sometimes struck patients once literally kicking out a female patient 126 82 Author and Lacanian psychoanalyst Jacques Alain Miller asserts that Lacan s morality derives from a superior cynicism 127 Lacan was criticised for being aggressive with his clients often physically hitting them sometimes sleeping with them 128 304 d and charging exorbitant amounts of money for each session 129 e Jean Laplanche argued that Lacan could have harmed some of his clients 130 Others have been more forceful still describing him as The Shrink from Hell 131 132 133 and listing the many associates from lovers and family to colleagues patients and editors who were left damaged in his wake Feminist criticism edit Many feminist thinkers have criticized Lacan s thought American philosopher Cynthia Willett accuses Lacan for portraying the mother less as a loving nurturing presence in the infant s world but rather as a whore who abandons the child to a higher bidder for her affections 134 while Judith Butler philosopher and gender studies scholar reworks these notions as gender performativity 135 Psycholinguist and cultural theorist Luce Irigaray ridicules through mimicry and exaggeration these representations of femininity posited as natural and proper by Lacan 136 Irigaray accuses Lacan of perpetuating phallocentric mastery in philosophical and psychoanalytic discourse 137 f Others have echoed this accusation seeing Lacan as trapped in the very phallocentric mastery his language ostensibly sought to undermine 138 The result Castoriadis would maintain was to make all thought depend upon Lacan himself and thus to stifle the capacity for independent thought among all those around him 24 386 In an interview with anthropologist James Hunt Sylvia Lacan said of her late husband He was a man who worked tremendously hard Tremendously intelligent He was what is called well a domestic tyrant But he was worth the trouble I have absolutely no reproaches to make against him Just the contrary But it was not possible to be a wife a mother to my children and an actress at the same time 139 Mathematics in psychoanalysis edit In their work Fashionable Nonsense 1997 through which their stated intention was to show that famous intellectuals abuse scientific terminology and concepts 140 x professors of Physics Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont examine Lacan s frequent references to Mathematics They are highly critical of his use of terms from mathematical fields accusing him of superficial erudition of abusing scientific concepts that he does not understand and of producing statements that are not even wrong 140 21 In a seminar held in 1959 he confuses the irrational numbers with the imaginary numbers despite claiming to be precise g A year later the mathematical calculations he presents in another seminar are assessed as pure fantasies 140 25 26 Sokal and Bricmont find Lacan to be fond of topology in which though they see Lacan committing serious errors He uses technical terms erroneously e g space bounded closed and even topology itself and posits claims about a literal and not just symbolic or even metaphorical relation of topological mathematics with neurosis h 140 18 21 141 In the book s preface the authors state they shall not enter into the debate over the purely psychoanalytic part of Lacan s work 140 17 Nonetheless after presenting their case they comment that Lacan never explains the relevance of his mathematical concepts for psychoanalysis stating that the link with psychoanalysis is not supported by any argument Equally meaningless they find his famous formulae of sexuation offered in support for the maxim There are no sexual relations Considering the cryptic writings the play on words and fractured syntax as well as the reverent exegesis accorded to Lacan s work by disciples they point out a similarity to religiosity i 140 31 37 Incomprehensibility edit Several critics have dismissed Lacan s work wholesale French philosopher Francois Roustang fr called it an incoherent system of pseudo scientific gibberish and quoted linguist Noam Chomsky s opinion that Lacan was an amusing and perfectly self conscious charlatan 142 Noam Chomsky in a 2012 interview on Veterans Unplugged said Q uite frankly I thought Lacan was a total charlatan He was just posturing for the television cameras in the way many Paris intellectuals do Why this is influential I haven t the slightest idea I don t see anything there that should be influential 143 Academic and former Lacanian analyst Dylan Evans j came to dismiss Lacanianism as lacking a sound scientific basis and as harming rather than helping patients He criticized Lacan s followers for treating Lacan s writings as holy writ 144 Richard Webster decries what he sees as Lacan s obscurity arrogance and the resultant Cult of Lacan 145 Roger Scruton included Lacan in his book Fools Frauds and Firebrands Thinkers of the New Left and named him as the only fool included in the book his other targets merely being misguided or frauds 146 In Les Freudiens heretiques the 8th tome of his work Contre histoire de la philosophie Anti History of Philosophy 128 philosopher and author Michel Onfray describes Lacan s Ecrits as illegible 128 49 According to Onfray Lacan engages in constant word play has a taste for the formulaic and deploys incantatory glossolalia and unnecessary neologisms k He calls Lacan a charlatan and a dandy figure who sinks into autism eventually becoming senile 128 49 50 Works editSelected works published in English listed below More complete listings can be found at Lacan com Ecrits A Selection transl by Alan Sheridan New York W W Norton amp Co 1977 ISBN 0393300471 Ecrits The First Complete Edition in English transl by Bruce Fink New York W W Norton amp Co 2006 ISBN 0393329259 Feminine Sexuality Jacques Lacan and the ecole freudienne edited by Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose transl by Jacqueline Rose W W Norton amp Co New York 1983 ISBN 0393016331 My Teaching transl by David Macey Verso London 2008 ISBN 9781844672714 The Seminar Book I Freud s Papers on Technique 1953 1954 edited by Jacques Alain Miller transl by John Forrester W W Norton amp Co New York 1988 ISBN 0393306976 The Seminar Book II The Ego in Freud s Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis 1954 1955 ed by Jacques Alain Miller transl by Sylvana Tomaselli W W Norton amp Co New York 1988 ISBN 0393307093 The Seminar Book III The Psychoses edited by Jacques Alain Miller transl by Russell Grigg W W Norton amp Co New York 1993 ISBN 0393316122 The Seminar Book V Formations of the Unconscious edited by Jacques Alain Miller transl by Russell Grigg Polity Press New York 2017 ISBN 0745660371 The Seminar Book VII The Ethics of Psychoanalysis 1959 1960 ed by Jacques Alain Miller transl by Dennis Porter W W Norton amp Co New York 1992 ISBN 0393316130 The Seminar Book VIII Transference ed by Jacques Alain Miller transl by Bruce Fink Polity Press New York 2015 ISBN 0745660398 The Seminar Book X Anxiety 1962 1963 ed by Jacques Alain Miller transl by A R Price Polity Press New York 2014 ISBN 074566041X The Seminar Book XI The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis 1964 ed by Jacques Alain Miller transl by Alan Sheridan W W Norton amp Co New York 1977 ISBN 0393317757 The Seminar Book XVII The Other Side of Psychoanalysis ed by Jacques Alain Miller transl by Russell Grigg W W Norton amp Co New York 2007 ISBN 0393330400 The Seminar Book XIX or Worse ed by Jacques Alain Miller Polity Press New York 2018 ISBN 0745682448 The Seminar Book XX Encore On Feminine Sexuality the Limits of Love and Knowledge ed by Jacques Alain Miller transl by Bruce Fink W W Norton amp Co New York 1998 ISBN 0393319164 The Seminar Book XXIII The Sinthome ed by Jacques Alain Miller transl by A R Price Polity Press New York 2016 ISBN 1509510001 Television A Challenge to the Psychoanalytic Establishment ed Joan Copjec trans Rosalind Krauss Jeffrey Mehlman et al W W Norton amp Co New York 1990 ISBN 0393335674 See also editChronology of Jacques Lacan The Seminars of Jacques Lacan Jacques Lacan s Complete French Bibliography Of Structure as the Inmixing of an Otherness Prerequisite to Any Subject Whatever Johns Hopkins University 1966 Jacques Lacan Kant with Sade The Seminar on The Purloined Letter The Crime of the Papin Sisters Love beyond Law further discussions by Zizek on Desire in the Lacanian conceptual edificeFootnotes edit The thesis was published in Paris by Librairie E Francois 1932 reprinted in Paris by Editions du Seuil 1975 When the French Society of Psychoanalysis requested official recognition from and affiliation with the Association Psychanalytique Internationale International Psychoanalytical Association in 1959 the API demanded the sidelining of Jacques Lacan as a didactician Two currents of the Societe Francaise de Psychanalyse French Society of Psychoanalysis then stood opposed at each other one which became the majority in the SFP in November 1963 was led by Daniel Lagache and others while a second current which became the minority brought together the supporters of Jacques Lacan Godin relates without criticizing this that Lacan would often read Le Figaro throughout a session turning the pages noisily and sometimes exclaiming this is insane at what he was reading And he d never give change if the client did not have the exact amount of money for the session In her biography Roudinesco clarifies that this would happen always away from the place where the analysis was taking place Rey who was Marie Claire editor relates that in order to be able to meet the prices of Lacan for whom he constantly felt gratitude abandoned journalism and started writing best sellers Irigaray too has been criticized by Sokal amp Bricmont for ostensibly misusing scientific terminology in her work Among their points of criticism are the interest Irigaray claims Einstein had in accelerations without electromagnetic re equilibrations her confusing special relativity for general relativity and her claim Irigaray To Speak is Never Neutral 2017 that Einstein s mass energy equivalence equation is a sexed equation since it privileges the speed of light over other speeds that are vitally necessary to us Lacan is quoted defining human life as a calculus in which zero is irrational E g Lacan states The torus really exists and it is exactly the structure of the neurotic It is not an analogon it is not even an abstraction because an abstraction is some sort of diminution of reality and I think the torus is reality itself Lacan 1970 They end posing the rhetorical question whether we are dealing with a new religion Evans published a dictionary of Lacanian terms in 1996 titled An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis In 2002 the Lacanian School of Psychoanalysis Ecole lacanienne de psychanalyse edited and published a book titled 789 Neologismes de Jacques Lacan Epel publishers References edit Yannis Stavrakakis Lacan and the Political Routledge 2002 p 13 Lacan has been hailed as one of the cornerstones of this movement poststructuralism Michael P Clark Jacques Lacan Volume I An Annotated Bibliography Routledge 2014 p xviii After completing his studies at the Faculte de medecine de Paris Lacan began his residence at the Hopital Saint Anne in Paris There he specialized in psychiatry under the direction of Gaetan Gatian de Clerambault From 1928 1929 Lacan studied at the Infirmerie Speciale pres de la Prefecture de Police fr and received a Diplome de medecin legiste specialist in legal medicine after working at the Hopital Henri Rousselle from 1929 to 1931 In 1932 after a second year at Saint Anne s Clinique de Maladies Mentales et de l Encephale Lacan received the Doctorat d etat in psychiatry and published his thesis De la Psychose paranoiaque dans ses rapports avec la personnalite Lacan Jacques Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 27 October 2021 Lacan Jacques Lexico UK English Dictionary US English Dictionary Oxford University Press permanent dead link dead link Lacan Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary a b David Macey Introduction Jacques Lacan 1994 The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho Analysis London Penguin Books p xiv SEMINARS OF JACQUES LACAN CONTENTS www lacan com Retrieved 2 November 2023 Bowie Malcolm Lacan London Fontana 1991 p 45 a b c d e f g h i j Roudinesco E Mehlman J Lacan J 1990 Jacques Lacan amp Co A History of Psychoanalysis in France 1925 1985 University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 72997 8 Retrieved 28 November 2021 Catherine Millot Life with Lacan Cambridge Polity Press 2018 p 104 a b c d e f Macey David 1988 Lacan in Contexts London Verso ISBN 978 0860919421 Desmond John 2012 Psychoanalytic Accounts of Consuming Desire Hearts of Darkness NY Palgrave Macmillan Evans Dylan From Lacan to Darwin Archived 2006 02 10 at the Wayback Machine in The Literary Animal Evolution and the Nature of Narrative eds Jonathan Gottschall and David Sloan Wilson Evanston Northwestern University Press 2005 David Macey Introduction in Jacques Lacan 1994 The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho Analysis London Penuin Books pp xv xvi Lacan Jaques 1975 De la psychose paranoiaque dans ses rapports avec la personnalite PDF Editions du Seuil Evans Julia Lacanian Works Retrieved 28 September 2014 Laurent E Lacan Analysand in Hurly Burly Issue 3 Roudinesco Elisabeth The mirror stage an obliterated archive The Cambridge Companion to Lacan Ed Jean Michel Rabate Cambridge CUP 2003 Serrano Richard 22 May 1997 Lacan s Oriental Language of the Unconscious SubStance 26 3 90 106 doi 10 2307 3685596 JSTOR 3685596 Kirshner Lewis A 1 December 2012 Toward an Ethics of Psychoanalysis A Critical Reading of Lacan s Ethics Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 60 6 1223 1242 doi 10 1177 0003065112457876 ISSN 0003 0651 PMID 23118239 Le seminaire Livre VIII Le transfert Paris Seuil 1991 Minutes of the IPA The SFP Study Group in Television A Challenge to the Psychoanalytic Establishment pp 79 80 Lacan J Founding Act in Television A Challenge to the Psychoanalytic Establishment pp 97 106 a b c d Roudinesco Elisabeth 1997 Jacques Lacan Cambridge Polity Press ISBN 978 0 7456 1523 3 OCLC 37852095 Proposition du 9 octobre 1967 sur le psychanalyste a l Ecole French Communist Party official philosopher Louis Althusser did much to advance this association in the 1960s Zoltan Tar and Judith Marcus in Frankfurt school of sociology ISBN 0 87855 963 9 p 276 wrote that Althusser s call to Marxists that the Lacanian enterprise might help further revolutionary ends endorsed Lacan s work even further Elizabeth A Grosz writes in her Jacques Lacan A Feminist Introduction that Shortly after the tumultuous events of May 1968 Lacan was accused by the authorities of being a subversive and directly influencing the events that transpired Regnault F I Was Struck by What You Said Hurly Burly 6 23 28 Price A Lacan s Remarks on Chinese Poetry Hurly Burly 2 2009 On Lacan s remarks on Chinese Poetry in Seminar XXIV November 2009 Adrian Price Lacanian Works Archived from the original on 1 February 2022 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Lacan J Le seminaire livre XXIII Le sinthome Lacan J Conferences et entretiens dans les universites nord americans Scilicet 6 7 1976 Lacan J Letter of Dissolution Television A Challenge to the Psychoanalytic Establishment 129 131 Lacan J Overture to the 1st International Encounter of the Freudian Field Hurly Burly 6 Johnston Adrian 10 July 2018 Jacques Lacan Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stanford University a b c Jacobus Mary 2005 The poetics of psychoanalysis in the wake of Klein Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 924636 6 OCLC 67231305 Jacques Lacan Ecrits A Selection London 1997 p 197 Lacan Ecrits p 197 and p 20 Lacan Ecrits p 250 Lisa Appignanesi John Forrester Freud s Women London 2005 p 462 David Macey Introduction Jacques Lacan The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho Analysis London 1994 p xxii Lacan Of Structure as an Inmixing of an Otherness Prerequisite to Any Subject Whatever In The Languages of Criticism and the Sciences of Man The Structuralist Controversy ed R Macksey amp E Donato Baltimore amp London Johns Hopkins University Press 1970 186 195 Sigmund Freud On Metapsychology Penguin 1984 p 207 The Dead Mother The Work of Andre Green Book Review apadivisions org Retrieved 21 May 2019 Lacan J Some Reflections on the Ego in Ecrits a b c d e f g Evans D 1996 An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 13522 1 Lacan J La relation d objet in Ecrits Lacan J The Mirror Stage as Formative of the Function of the I in Ecrits a selection London Routledge Classics 2001 p 5 Lacan Tenth Seminar L angoisse 1962 1963 a b c d Lacan J The Seminar of Jacques Lacan Book II The Ego in Freud s Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis 1954 1955 W W Norton amp Company 1991 ISBN 978 0 393 30709 2 Schema L in The Seminar Book II The Ego in Freud s Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis Dylan Evans An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis London Routledge 1996 p 133 translation modified Lacan J The Seminar Book III The Psychoses 1955 1956 translated by Russell Grigg New York W W Norton amp Company 1997 Lacan J Le seminaire Livre VIII Le transfert 1960 1961 ed Jacques Alain Miller Paris Seuil 1994 Lacan J Seminar on The Purloined Letter in Ecrits Lacan J The Agency of the Letter in the Unconscious in Ecrits and Seminar V Les formations de l inconscient Gallop Jane Reading Lacan Ithaca Cornell University Press 1985 Elizabeth A Grosz Jacques Lacan A Feminist Introduction Irigary Luce This Sex Which Is Not One 1977 Eng trans 1985 Derrida Jacques Dissemination 1983 Butler Judith Bodies That Matter On the Discursive Limits of Sex 1993 Bailly Lionel 1 December 2012 Lacan A Beginner s Guide Oneworld Publications ISBN 978 1 78074 162 8 Lacan Seminar III The Psychoses Ecrits The Directions of the Treatment a b Lacan J Seminar XI The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis Lacan J The Function and Field of Speech and Language in Psychoanalysis in Ecrits The term used by Rabelais is not sinthome but symptomates Amis respondit Pantagruel a tous les doubtes et questions par vous proposees compete une seule solution et a tous telz symptomates et accidents une seule medicine Francois Rabelais Les Cinq Livres La Pochotheque 1994 p 1193 Macey David On the subject of Lacan in Psychoanalysis in Contexts Paths between Theory and Modern Culture London Routledge 1995 Fink Bruce The Lacanian Subject Between Language and Jouissance Princeton University Press 1996 ISBN 978 0 691 01589 7 Lacan J The Seminar of Jacques Lacan Book I Freud s Papers on Technique 1953 1954 W W Norton amp Company 1988 ISBN 978 0 393 30697 2 Lacan J The Seminar of Jacques Lacan Book II The Ego in Freud s Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis 1954 1955 W W Norton amp Company 1988 ISBN 978 0 393 30709 2 Lacan J The Direction of the Treatment and the Principles of Its Powers in Ecrits A Selection translated by Bruce Fink W W Norton amp Company 2004 ISBN 978 0393325287 a b Lacan J The Signification of the Phallus in Ecrits Zizek Slavoj The Plague of Fantasies London Verso 1997 p 39 Lacan J The Seminar Book XI The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis 1964 W W Norton amp Company 1998 ISBN 978 0393317756 Kojeve Alexandre Introduction to the Reading of Hegel translated by James H Nichols Jr New York Basic Books 1969 p 39 Lacan J Ecrits A Selection translated by Bruce Fink W W Norton amp Company 2004 ISBN 978 0393325287 Lacan J The Seminar Book VII The Ethics of Psychoanalysis 1959 1960 W W Norton amp Company 1997 ISBN 978 0393316131 Lacan J The Instance of the Letter in the Unconscious or Reason since Freud in Ecrits A Selection translated by Bruce Fink W W Norton amp Company 2004 ISBN 978 0393325287 Lacan J Le Seminaire Livre IV La relation d objet 1956 1957 ed Jacques Alain Miller Paris Seuil 1994 a b c d e The Seminar Book XI The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis Freud Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality S E VII Freud Beyond the Pleasure Principle S E XVIII Position of the Unconscious Ecrits Slavoj Zizek Looking Awry An Introduction to Jacques Lacan Through Popular Culture Jacques Lacan Ecrits A Selection London 1997 p 58 and p 121 Jacques Alain Miller Microscopia in Jacques Lacan Television London 1990 p xxvii Bruce Fink The Lacanian Subject Princeton 1997 p 173 a b Miller p xxvii Seminar XXI quoted in Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose eds Feminine Sexuality New York 1982 p 51 Oliver Feltham Enjoy your Stay in Justin Clemens Russell Grigg Jacques Lacan and the Other side of psychoanalysis 2006 p 180 Thomas Kuhn The Structure of Scientific Revolutions London 1970 p 175 John Forrester Dead on Time Lacan s Theory of Temporality in Forrester The Seductions of Psychoanalysis Freud Lacan and Derrida Cambridge C U P pp 169 218 352 370 Janet Malcolm Psychoanalysis The Impossible Profession London 1988 p 4 Jacques Lacan Ecrits A Selection London 1996 p 99 a b Bruce Fink A Clinical Introduction to Lacananian Psychoanalysis Theory and Technique Newhaven Harvard 1996 de Mijolla Alain La scission de la Societe Psychanalytique de Paris en 1953 quelques notes pour un rappel historique Societe Psychanalytique de Paris Archived from the original on 16 December 2008 Retrieved 8 April 2010 Lacan Jacques 4 July 1953 Letter to Rudolph Loewenstein Vol 40 p 65 ISBN 978 0 262 75188 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Mikkel Borch Jacobsen Lacan The Absolute Master 1991 p 120 Cornelius Castoriadis in Roudinesco 1997 p 386 Sherry Turkle Psychoanalytic Politics Freud s French Revolution London 1978 p 204 David Macey Introduction Jacques Lacan The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho Analysis London 1994 p xiv and xxxv R Horacio Etchegoyen The Fundamentals of Psychoanalytic Technique London 2005 p 677 Michael Parsons The Dove that Returns the Dove that Vanishes London 2000 pp 16 17 Julia Kristeva Intimate Revolt New York 2002 p 42 a b Rabate Jean Michel 2003 Rabate Jean Michel ed Lacan s turn to Freud The Cambridge Companion to Lacan Cambridge Companions to Literature Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 24 ISBN 978 0 521 80744 9 retrieved 26 May 2022 Elisabeth Roudinesco Jacques Lacan Malden Polity Press 1999 11 89 98 435 Jacques Lacan L ethique de la psychanalyse Seminaire VII Paris Seuil 1986 224 225 Jacques Lacan Le Triomphe de La Religion precede de Discours aux Catholiques Paris Seuil 2005 65 Abdesselem Rechak Le grand secret de la psychanalyse Mandeure self published 2020 David Macey Introduction Jacques Lacan The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho analysis London 1994 p x Richard Stevens Sigmund Freud Examining the Essence of his Contribution Basingstoke 2008 p 191n Yannis Stavrakakis Lacan and the Political London Routledge 1999 pp 5 6 e g A Shining Affliction ISBN 978 0 14 024012 2 Le 388 Marta Jan 1987 Lacan and post Structuralism The American Journal of Psychoanalysis Springer Science and Business Media LLC 47 1 51 57 doi 10 1007 bf01252332 ISSN 0002 9548 PMID 2437811 S2CID 21435280 Lacan Jacques 2001 Autres Ecrits Other Writings in French Seuil ISBN 978 2020486477 Onfray Michel Erich Fromm et la psychanalyse humaniste Erich Fromm and the humanist psychoanalysis Conference held in the Universite populaire de Caen transmitted on France Culture 16 August 2011 a b c Roudinesco Elisabeth 1993 Jacques Lacan Esquisse d une vie histoire d un systeme de pensee Sketch of a life history of a system of thought in French Fayard ISBN 978 2213031460 Turkle Sherry 1978 Psychoanalytic Politics Freud s French Revolution Basic Books ISBN 978 0465066070 Retrieved 24 October 2023 Lacan Jacques 1977 Ouverture de la section clinique Opening of the clinical section PDF Ornicar in French 9 7 24 Retrieved 29 October 2023 Jacqueline Rose On Not Being Able To Sleep Psychoanalysis and the Modern World London 2003 p 176 Philip Hill Lacan for Beginners London 1997 p 8 Malcolm Bowie Lacan London 1991 pp 6 7 Adam Phillips On Flirtation London 1996 pp 161 2 Borch Jacobsen Mikkel 2005 Une Theorie Zero A Zero Theory In Meyer Catherine ed Le livre noir de la psychanalyse The black boom of Psychoanalysis in French Les Arenes pp 228 323 ISBN 978 2912485885 Godin Jean Guy 2001 Jacques Lacan 5 rue de Lille Jacques Lacan 5 Lille street in French Seuil ISBN 978 2020121606 Onfray Michel Miller Jacques Alain 2010 En finir avec Freud To be done with Freud Philosophie Magazine in French 36 10 15 Sa morale releve d un cynisme superieur a b c d Onfray Michel 2013 Les Freudiens heretiques Contre histoire de la philosophie The heretic Freudians Anti History of Philosophy in French Vol 8th Editions Grasset ISBN 978 2246802686 Rey Pierre 2016 1st pub 1988 Une saison chez Lacan A season at Lacan s in French Editions Points ISBN 978 2020121606 Andre Jacques 2012 Hommage a Jean Laplanche Le Carnet Psy in French 6 164 58 61 Retrieved 29 October 2023 Lacan avait pu nuire a certains de ses analysants Jeffries Stuart 7 April 2018 The selfish shrink life with Jacques Lacan The Spectator Australia Retrieved 31 October 2023 Tallis Raymond 31 October 1997 The Shrink from Hell Times Higher Education Retrieved 31 October 2023 Wolters Eugene 8 October 2014 French Philosopher Jacques Lacan Was Sort of a Dick Vice Retrieved 31 October 2023 Willett Cynthia 1998 Maternal Ethics and Other Slave Moralities Routledge ISBN 978 0415912105 Butler Judith 2006 Gender Trouble Feminism and the Subversion of Identity Routledge ISBN 978 0415389556 Irigaray Luce 1985 Speculum of the Other Woman Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801493300 Irigaray Luce 2011 Cosi Fan Tutti Continental Aesthetics Reader Jacqueline Rose Introduction II in Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose Feminine Sexuality New York 1982 p 56 Hunt Jamer Kennedy 1995 Absence to presence The life history of Sylvia Bataille Lacan France PDF Rice Digital Scholarship Retrieved 24 October 2020 a b c d e f Sokal Alan Bricmont Jean 1998 Fashionable nonsense postmodern intellectuals abuse of science New York Picador USA ISBN 0 312 20407 8 OCLC 39605994 Lacan Jacques 1 May 1970 Of structure as an inmixing of an otherwise prerequisite to any subject whatsoever In Macksey Richard Donato Eugenio eds The Languages of Criticism amp the Sciences of Man the Structuralist Controversy Johns Hopkins University Press pp 186 200 ISBN 978 0801810473 Roustang Francois 1986 L illusion lacanienne The Lacanian Delusion Lacan de l equivoque a l impasse Lacan from ambiguity to dead end in French Les Editions de Minuit pp 100 110 ISBN 978 2707311085 Springer Mike 28 June 2013 Noam Chomsky Slams Zizek and Lacan Empty Posturing Open Culture Retrieved 31 August 2018 Evans Dylan 2005 From Lacan to Darwin In Jonathan Gottschall David Sloan eds The Literary Animal Evolution and the Nature of Narrative Evanston Illinois Northwestern University Press pp 38 55 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 305 690 The Cult of Lacan Richardwebster net 14 June 1907 Archived from the original on 10 September 2002 Retrieved 18 June 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Poole Steven 10 December 2015 Fools Frauds and Firebrands by Roger Scruton review a demolition of socialist intellectuals The Guardian Further reading editBiographical works edit Millot Catherine 2018 Life With Lacan Cambridge Polity Roudinesco Elisabeth 1999 Jacques Lacan An Outline of a Life and History of a System of Thought Cambridge Polity Introductory texts edit Benvenuto B Kennedy R 1986 The Works of Jacques Lacan An Introduction London Free Association Books ISBN 9780946960200 Bowie Malcolm 1991 Lacan London Fontana Dor Joel 2001 Introduction to the Reading of Lacan The Unconscious Structured Like a Language New York Other Press Evans Dylan 1997 An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis London Routledge Grosz Elizabeth 1991 Jacques Lacan a Feminist Introduction London Routledge Homer S 2005 Jacques Lacan London Routledge Leader D amp Groves J 1995 Lacan for Beginners London Icon Books Lee Jonathan Scott 2002 Jacques Lacan Amherst The University of Massachusetts Press Neill Calum 2023 Jacques Lacan the Basics Abington Oxon Routledge Textual commentaries edit Ecrits edit Fink Bruce Lacan to the Letter Reading Ecrits Closely University of Minnesota Press 2004 Hook D Vanheule S amp Neill C eds 2019 Reading Lacan s Ecrits From The Freudian Thing to Remarks on Daniel Lagache London Routledge Hook D Vanheule S amp Neill C eds 2022 Reading Lacan s Ecrits From Logical Time to Response to Jean Hyppolite London Routledge Vanheule S Hook D amp Neill C eds 2018 Reading Lacan s Ecrits From Signification of the Phallus to Metaphor of the Subject London Routledge Neill C Hook D amp Vanheule S eds 2023 Reading Lacan s Ecrits From Overture to This Collection to Presentation on Psychical Causality London Routledge Johnston Adrian 2017 Irrepressible Truth On Lacan s The Freudian Thing Cham Palgrave Macmillan Muller John P Richardson William J 1982 Lacan and Language A Reader s Guide to Ecrits New York International University Press Nobus Dany 2022 The Law of Desire On Lacan s Kant with Sade Cham Palgrave MacMillan The Seminars edit Cox Cameron O with Owens C 2021 Studying Lacan s Seminar VI Dream Symptom and the Collapse of Subjectivity London Routledge Owens C and Almqvist N 2019 Studying Lacan s Seminars IV and V From Lack to Desire London Routledge Feldstein Richard Jaanus Maire Fink Bruce eds 1996 Reading seminars I and II Lacan s return to Freud seminar I Freud s papers on technique seminar II the ego in Freud s theory and in the technique of psychoanalysis Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 2780 3 OCLC 42854739 Feldstein Richard Jaanus Maire Fink Bruce eds 1995 Reading Seminar XI Lacan s Four fundamental concepts of psychoanalysis the Paris seminars in English Albany State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 2148 1 OCLC 42854927 Feldstein Richard Jaanus Maire Fink Bruce eds 2002 Reading Seminar XX Lacan s major work on love knowledge and feminine sexuality Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 5432 0 OCLC 53275064 Harari Roberto Lacan s Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis An Introduction New York Other Press 2004 Harari Roberto Lacan s Seminar on Anxiety An Introduction New York Other Press 2005 Miller Jacques Alain Introduction to Reading Jacques Lacan s Seminar on Anxiety I New York Lacanian Ink 26 Fall 2005 Miller Jacques Alain Introduction to Reading Jacques Lacan s Seminar on Anxiety II New York Lacanian Ink 27 Spring 2006 General commentaries edit Badiou Alain The Formulas of l Etourdit New York Lacanian Ink 27 Spring 2006 Badiou A 2006 Lacan and the Pre Socratics Lacan Dot Com Badiou A Roudinesco E Smith J E 2014 Jacques Lacan Past and Present A Dialogue Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 16511 2 Benvenuto Sergio 2020 Conversations with Lacan Seven Lectures for Understanding Lacan Abingdon Oxon Routledge ISBN 978 0 367 14879 9 OCLC 1134622118 Bracher Mark Massardier Kenney Francoise Alcorn Marshall W Corthell Ronald J 1994 Lacanian Theory of Discourse Subject Structure and Society New York New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 1299 1 Brennan Teresa 1993 History after Lacan London Routledge Dor Joel 1999 The Clinical Lacan New York Other Press Felman Shoshana 1987 Jacques Lacan and the Adventure of insight Psychoanalysis in Contemporary Culture Cambridge Mass Harvard Univ Press Fink Bruce 1996 The Lacanian Subject Between Language and Jouissance Princeton University Press 1996 Fink Bruce 1997 A Clinical Introduction to Lacanian Psychoanalysis Theory and Technique Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Fink Bruce 2014 Against Understanding vol 1 Commentary and Critique in a Lacanian Key London Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group ISBN 978 0 415 63543 1 Forrester John 1985 Language and the Origins of Psychoanalysis Basingstoke and London Macmillan Glynos Jason and Stavrakakis Yannis eds 2002 Lacan and Science London Karnac Books Hendrix John Shannon 2006 Architecture and Psychoanalysis Peter Eisenman and Jacques Lacan New York Peter Lang ISBN 978 0 820481 71 5 Johnston Adrian 2005 Time Driven Metapsychology and the Splitting of the Drive Evanston Northwestern University Press Kovacevic Filip 2007 Liberating Oedipus Psychoanalysis as Critical Theory Landham MD Lexington Books Macey David 1988 Lacan in Contexts London Verso Mandal Mahitosh 2018 Jacques Lacan From Clinic to Culture Hyderabad Orient BlackSwan McGowan Todd and Sheila Kunkle Eds 2004 Lacan and Contemporary Film New York Other Press Miller Jacques Alain Jacques Lacan s Later Teachings New York Spring Lacanian Ink 21 2003 Miller Jacques Alain The Paradigms of Jouissance New York Lacanian Ink 17 Fall 2000 Miller Jacques Alain Suture Elements of the Logic of the Signifier Lacan Dot Com The Symptom 2006 Miller Jacques Alain Religion Psychoanalysis Lacanian Ink 23 Spring 2004 Miller Jacques Alain Pure Psychoanalysis Applied Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy Lacanian Ink 20 Spring 2002 Miller Jacques Alain 2013 Applied Lacanian Psychoanalysis Minneapolis London University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 8319 2 OCLC 842322946 Nasio Juan David Book of Love and Pain The Thinking at the Limit with Freud and Lacan transl by David Pettigrew and Francois Raffoul Albany SUNY Press 2003 Nasio Juan David 1998 Five Lessons on the Psychoanalytic Theory of Jacques Lacan Albany SUNY Press Nasio Juan David 1999 Hysteria The Splendid Child of Psychoanalysis Translated by Susan Fairfield New York Other Press Neill Calum 2014 Without Ground Lacanian Ethics and the Assumptions of Subjectivity London Palgrave Nobus Dany ed 1999 Key Concepts of Lacanian Psychoanalysis New York Other Press Nobus Dany 2022 Critique of Psychoanalytic Reason Studies in Lacanian Theory and Practice London Routledge Parker Ian 2011 Lacanian Psychoanalysis Revolutions in Subjectivity London Routledge Pettigrew David and Francois Raffoul eds 1996 Disseminating Lacan Albany SUNY Press Rabate Jean Michel ed 2003 The Cambridge Companion to Lacan Cambridge Cambridge University Press Rose Jacqueline 1986 Sexuality in the Field of Vision London Verso Roudinesco Elisabeth Lucien Febvre a la rencontre de Jacques Lacan Paris 1937 with Peter Schottler Geneses Annee 1993 Vol 13 n 1 Roudinesco Elisabeth 1990 Jacques Lacan amp Co a History of Psychoanalysis in France 1925 1985 Chicago Chicago University Press Roudinesco Elisabeth Lacan The Plague Psychoanalysis and History ed John Forrester Teddington Artesian Books 2008 Safouan Moustafa 2004 Four Lessons of Psychoanalysis New York Other Press Schneiderman Stuart 1983 Jacques Lacan the Death of an Intellectual Hero Harvard University Press Soler Colette 2006 What Lacan said about women a psychoanalytic study Translated by Holland John New York Other Press ISBN 978 1 59051 170 1 OCLC 58546399 Stavrakakis Yannis 2007 The Lacanian Left Albany State University of New York Press Turkle Sherry and Wandollheim Richard Lacan an exchange New York Review of Books 26 9 1979 Zizek Slavoj Jacques Lacan s Four Discourses Lacan Dot Com 2008 Zizek Slavoj Woman is One of the Names of the Father or how Not to misread Lacan s formulas of sexuation Lacan Dot Com 2005 Zizek Slavoj The object as a limit of discourse approaches to the Lacanian real Prose Studies 11 3 1988 pp 94 120 Zizek Slavoj Jacques Lacan as Reader of Hegel New York Lacanian Ink 27 Fall 2006 Zizek Slavoj 2006 How to Read LacanLondon Granta Books External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Jacques Lacan Centre for Freudian Analysis and Research World Association of Psychoanalysis Homepage of the Lacanian School of Psychoanalysis and the San Francisco Society for Lacanian Studies The London Society of the New Lacanian School Site includes online library of clinical amp theoretical texts Lacan Dot Com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacques Lacan amp oldid 1200952212, wikipedia, wiki, 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