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Lacan in 90 Minutes

From No Subject

Lacan in 90 Minutes · Page 3 of 8

Lacan in 90 Minutes is a short, narrative introduction to the work of Jacques Lacan—designed for readers who are curious, intelligent, and unfamiliar with psychoanalytic practice.

This series does not attempt to explain Lacanian terminology in depth. Instead, it offers orientation: historical, intellectual, and chronological. It tells the story of how Lacan emerged from psychiatry, re-read Freud, transformed psychoanalytic teaching through his seminars, and left behind a body of work that continues to provoke debate across disciplines.

The entire series can be read in under 90 minutes.


What This Series Is

  • A guided narrative, not a glossary
  • Written for students, humanities readers, and non-clinicians
  • Focused on intellectual biography and historical context
  • Organized chronologically, following Lacan’s development over time
  • Designed to prepare readers to encounter Lacan’s concepts elsewhere on NoSubject

When technical terms arise, they link out to explanatory pages rather than being defined here.


What This Series Is Not

  • A technical introduction to Lacanian concepts
  • A clinical training guide
  • A substitute for reading the seminars themselves
  • An attempt to summarize Lacan’s work as a finished system

If you are looking for conceptual explanations, start with → Introduction to Key Lacanian Concepts


How to Read This Series

The pages are meant to be read in order. Together, they trace a single arc:

  1. Why Lacan still matters
  2. His formation in psychiatry
  3. The “return to Freud”
  4. The invention of the Seminar
  5. Institutional conflict and exclusion
  6. The turn to language
  7. Late experimentation
  8. Lacan’s afterlife and legacy

You can stop at any point—but the series works best as a whole.


The Series

  1. Why Lacan?
Why Lacan remains a central—and controversial—figure in psychoanalysis and critical theory.
  1. From Psychiatry to Psychoanalysis
Lacan’s early formation and why clinical psychiatry mattered to his later work.
  1. The “Return to Freud”
Lacan’s challenge to how Freud was being read and institutionalized.
  1. Teaching as Event: The Seminars
How Lacan transformed psychoanalysis through public, spoken teaching.
  1. Conflict and Excommunication
Institutional rupture, authority, and the politics of psychoanalysis.
  1. Language Changes Everything
Why language became central to Lacan’s rethinking of Freud.
  1. From Structure to Experiment
Lacan’s later turn toward formal risk and conceptual limits.
  1. After Lacan: Influence and Legacy
What remains of Lacan after his death—and why debate continues.

Where to Go Next

After completing this series, readers often continue in one of three directions:

There is no single correct path. Lacan’s work resists mastery and rewards sustained attention.


A Beginning, Not a Summary

“Lacan in 90 Minutes” is meant to make beginning possible.

It situates Lacan historically and intellectually so that his work can be encountered with curiosity rather than intimidation—and with context rather than abstraction.