Difference between revisions of "Seminar I"
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[[Jacques Lacan|Lacan]]'s first public [[seminar]] is held at [[Sainte-Anne Hospital]] soon after the establishment of the ''[[Société Française de Psychanalyse]]'' ([[SFP]]). | [[Jacques Lacan|Lacan]]'s first public [[seminar]] is held at [[Sainte-Anne Hospital]] soon after the establishment of the ''[[Société Française de Psychanalyse]]'' ([[SFP]]). | ||
− | It is concerned with | + | It is concerned with the [[treatment|technique]] of [[psychoanalysis]] and concepts such as [[resistance]], [[transference]] and [[interpretation|therapeutic efficiency]] -- within the framework of a "[[return to Freud]]". |
The [[seminar]] includes elaboration of [[Lacan]]'s notions of the [[symbolic]], the [[imaginary]] and the [[real]], the importance of [[speech]] and [[language]] in [[psychoanalysis]]. | The [[seminar]] includes elaboration of [[Lacan]]'s notions of the [[symbolic]], the [[imaginary]] and the [[real]], the importance of [[speech]] and [[language]] in [[psychoanalysis]]. |
Revision as of 19:21, 22 September 2006
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I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI XII XIII XIV XV XVI XVII XVIII XIX XX XXI XXII XXIII XXIV XXV XXVI XXVII Index
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1953 - 1954 | Les écrits techniques de Freud Freud's Papers on Technique |
Overview
Lacan's first public seminar is held at Sainte-Anne Hospital soon after the establishment of the Société Française de Psychanalyse (SFP).
It is concerned with the technique of psychoanalysis and concepts such as resistance, transference and therapeutic efficiency -- within the framework of a "return to Freud".
The seminar includes elaboration of Lacan's notions of the symbolic, the imaginary and the real, the importance of speech and language in psychoanalysis.
It also includes lengthy discussions of the clinical and theoretical work of contemporary psychoanalysts such as Michael Balint and Melanie Klein, as well as St Augustine and Jean-Paul Sartre.
His teaching is framed in a broad meditation where psychoanalysis verges on philosophy, theology, linguistics, mysticism, and game theory. Lacan develops his schema of the inverted bouquet (Bouquet renversé), as well as his concept of the mirror stage, as part of the topography of the Imaginary.
He appeals to the science of optics to systematize his previous analyzes of the specular relation.
He associates the "misconstruction" [méconnaissance) that characterizes the ego with negation (dénégation).