Changes
The LinkTitles extension automatically added links to existing pages (<a rel="nofollow" class="external free" href="https://github.com/bovender/LinkTitles">https://github.com/bovender/LinkTitles</a>).
The first volume contained Lacan's "Rome Report" from the new [[Société Française de Psychanalyse]] ([[SFP]]) ([[French Psychoanalytic Society]]) was a [[French]] [[psychoanalytic]] [[society's first congress in September 1953, as well as all the presentations made at that conference. Volume VI, "Structural Perspectives," published the acts of the international congress held at Royaumont in 1959. It included Daniel Lagache's paper "Psychoanalysis and Personality Structure," followed by Jacques Lacan's "Remarks on Daniel Lagache's Presentation: 'Psychoanalysis and Personality Structure."' It also included Lacan's "The Direction of the Treatment and the Principles of Its Power" and Dolto's "Personology and Body Image." Volume VII included the proceedings of an international conference ]] founded on feminine sexuality held in Amsterdam in 1960. It included "Guiding Remarks for a Conference on Feminine SexualityJune 18," by Lacan, and papers by Dolto on "The Destiny of Feminine Genital Libido" and by Wladimir Granoff and François Perrier on "Feminine Ideas and the Problem of Perversion in Women." This volume also included numerous papers and translations of texts, such as Ernest Jones's "Early Female Sexuality" and Joan Rivière's "Womanliness as Masquerade1953."
In the following years a [[Category:Psychoanalysiscomplex]][[Category:Jacques process]] of negotiation took [[place]] to determine the status of the '''SFP''' within the [[IPA]]. [[Lacan]]'s practice with his controversial innovaiton of variable-length sessions and the critical stance he took towards much of the accepted orthodoxy of psychoanalytic [[theory]] and practice led (in 1963) to a condition [[being]] set by the [[IPA]] that the registration of the '''SFP''' was dependent upon [[Lacan]] being removed from the [[list]] of [[training]] [[analysts]] within the organization. The [[IPA]] demanded [[Lacan]]'s [[expulsion]]. [[Lacan]]was expelled, finally excommunicated by the [[IPA|International]], and his teaching was condemned. In 1963 the [[IPA]] permitted him to practise [[anlaysis]] but not to teach or [[training|train]] candidates. The [[SFP]] [[divided]] into those willing to recognize the condition laid down by the [[IPA]] -- the [[exclusion]] of [[Lacan]] from the training program, and those who regrouped around [[Lacan]]. [[Lacan]] refused such a condition and left the '''SFP''' to form his won school (which became known as the) [[École Freudienne de Paris]] ([[EFP]]). In 1964 Lacan went on to found his own [[school]], [[École Freudienne de Paris]] ([[EFP]]).
The members of the [[S.F.P]]. disbanded in 1963 and announced the group's [[dissolution]] in 1964.
{{Jacques Lacan:School}}
==See Also==
* [[Société Française de Psychanalyse]] ([[SFP]])
* [[Société Parisienne de Psychanalyse]] ([[SPP]])
* [[École Freudienne de Paris]] ([[EFP]])
* [[International Psycho-Analytical Association]] ([[IPA]])
[[Category:Psychoanalysis]][[Category:Jacques Lacan]][[Category:Schools]]