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  • [[Image:Jacques-lacan-4.jpg|thumb|250px|right]] | name = Jacques Lacan
    13 KB (1,795 words) - 17:56, 3 June 2019
  • [[Psychoanalysis]] was founded by [[Sigmund Freud]] ...of Freud himself and to a close [[reading]] and [[understanding]] of those texts. For the next 26 years he would engage in this [[project]] of close reading
    7 KB (954 words) - 22:15, 20 May 2019
  • He explained [[art|artistic creation]] by reference to the [[concept]] of [[sublimation]], a process in which [[sexua ...ntuit directly the [[truth]]s which [[psychoanalysts]] only discover later by more laborious means.
    9 KB (1,212 words) - 02:13, 24 May 2019
  • The term [[sinthome]] is, as [[Lacan]] points out, an archaic way of writing what has more recently been spelt [ =====Jacques Lacan=====
    7 KB (994 words) - 23:14, 20 May 2019
  • ...nized by [[Louis Althusser]] and grew increasingly influenced by [[Jacques Lacan]]. ...of more main-line [[Marxism]]. In 1988 he published what is now considered by many to be his major [[statement]], ''L'être et l'événement''. He took u
    14 KB (2,106 words) - 17:50, 27 May 2019
  • [[Lacan]] was raised, grew up, in a comfortable middle-[[class]] [[Catholic]] [[fam [[Lacan]] went on to study '''[[medicine]]'' and specialized in '''psychiatry''' wi
    82 KB (12,528 words) - 20:43, 25 May 2019
  • ...erview with Eagleton. Further readings of the [[ideological]] are explored by [[Richard Rorty]] and Michèle Barrett. Finally Fredric [[Jameson]] supplie
    3 KB (397 words) - 19:06, 20 May 2019
  • ...e of the Papin Sisters]]</b></a>, transl. by Jon Anderson in <i>Critical [[Texts]]</i>, vol.5, 3, 1988. ...y Carolyn Asp in <i>Critical Texts</i>, vol.5, issue 3, 1988. Also transl. by Andrea Kahn in <i>Semiotext</i> 10, vol. 4, 1, 1981. In <i>Autres [[Écrits
    19 KB (2,949 words) - 21:03, 25 May 2019
  • ...rauss]], [[Althusser]], [[Fernand Braudel]]) and a new younger audience, [[Lacan]] talks [[about]] the [[censorship]] of his [[teachings]] and his [[excommu ...s to train [[analyst]]s and, at the same [[time]], address the non-analyst by raising the following questions: Is [[psychoanalysis]] a [[science]]? If so
    8 KB (1,250 words) - 02:22, 21 May 2019
  • ...psychoanalytic training – and, at the same time, address the non-analyst by raising the following questions: Is psychoanalysis a [[science]]? If so, un ...e paths of the unconscious." This declaration of allegiance contrasts with Lacan's critical study of Freud's [[dream]] about the dead son screaming "[[Fathe
    16 KB (2,456 words) - 12:15, 2 March 2021
  • ...ification]] first and communication second. A more extreme view is offered by [[Jean-Jacques Nattiez]] (1987; trans. 1990: 16) who, as a [[musicology|mus ...cs attempts to [[analyse]] and so [[identify]] the systemic rules accepted by all the participants.
    60 KB (8,683 words) - 22:58, 20 May 2019
  • ...f inorganic substance. These speculations seek to solve the riddle of life by supposing that these two instincts were struggling with each [[other]] from ..., [[biology]], or [[physics]]. Revision of his [[concepts]] was called for by his [[experience]] in [[psychoanalytic]] [[practice]]. He posited within th
    13 KB (1,919 words) - 06:44, 24 May 2019
  • ...orm]] of [[Marxian]] theory both from the [[model]] of science put forward by [[logical positivism]] and from what he and his colleagues perceived as the ...[[knowledge]], especially through taking stock of the limitations imposed by the fundamental, irreducible [[concepts]] in use in that knowledge. His no
    15 KB (2,047 words) - 04:48, 24 May 2019
  • ...[[Marriage]] of [[Marxism]] and [[Feminism]]." from The Second Wave edited by Linda Nicholson, 1997, p. 99.) ...ame time it is also the first mode of economy which is unable to [[exist]] by itself, which [[needs]] other [[economic]] systems as a medium and a soil."
    15 KB (2,221 words) - 19:47, 27 May 2019
  • ...shades of meaning in different areas of study and [[discussion]], and is, by its very [[nature]], difficult to define without depending on "un-deconstru ...ida|Jacques Derrida's]] ''dé[[construction]]''), and it has been explored by [[others]], including [[Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak]], [[Paul de Man]], [[Jo
    50 KB (7,273 words) - 21:41, 27 May 2019
  • [[Lacan]] and [[psychoanalysis]] ...k [[Marxism]] without any reference to Hegel’s absolute subject, he sees Lacan as trying to [[think]] psychoanalysis without any reference to a [[unified]
    68 KB (11,086 words) - 00:02, 26 May 2019
  • ...e and reformulate our previous understanding of his work. The real in late Lacan is inseparable from an understanding of the [[role]] of [[fantasy]], the [ ...the real, in his first published papers in the 1930s, but in these early [[texts]] it was essentially a [[philosophical]] concept designating 'absolute [[be
    33 KB (5,457 words) - 20:48, 25 May 2019
  • ...tics]], presumably by analogy with the term ''[[mytheme]]'' (a term coined by [[Claude Lévi-Strauss]] to denote the basic constituents of [[myth]]ologic ...sign]]". It is not used in conventional [[mathematics]], but is part of [[Lacan]]'s [[algebra]]. -->
    13 KB (1,920 words) - 19:17, 20 May 2019
  • ...contemporary academic politics, the idea to deal with Lenin is accompanied by two qualifications: yes, why not, we live in a [[liberal]] [[democracy]], t ...hird World catastrophes is thus to serve as the support of this Denkverbot by constantly reminding us how things may have been much worse: "Just look aro
    164 KB (26,048 words) - 22:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...in]] of doxa, of pragmatic considerations and compromises which always and by definition fall short of the unconditional [[ethical]] [[demand]]. The [[no ...fferent context (St Paul reinterprets Christ's crucifixion as his triumph; Lacan reads Freud through the [[mirror]]-[[stage]] [[Saussure]]), Lenin violently
    28 KB (4,533 words) - 19:44, 27 May 2019

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