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  • ...disclose by rewriting the [[Cartesian]] [[cogito]] in this way is that the subject is irrevocably split, torn asunder by language
    2 KB (264 words) - 23:59, 20 May 2019
  • The [[subject of enunciation]] is the "[[I]]" who speaks, the [[individual]] doing the [[speaking]]. The [[subject of the enunciated]] is the "[[I]]" of the [[sentence]].
    2 KB (246 words) - 23:59, 20 May 2019
  • ...desire,]] it is not surprising that he focuses attention on the "dialectic of desire," nor should it be surprising that [[negation]] and negativity come ...role that the phallus plays in a [[dialectical]] assumption by the subject of his own desire now becomes thematized.
    45 KB (7,359 words) - 16:48, 24 December 2020
  • =The Subject= [[Slavoj Žižek]] fully endorses the [[model]] of the [[Cartesian subject]].
    73 KB (12,478 words) - 23:06, 24 May 2019
  • ...g to Jacques [[Lacan]], the [[unary]] [[trait]] is the elementary [[form]] of the [[signifier]] as pure [[difference]] that supports [[symbolic]] identif ...er]] Zug) (1921c, p. 107). [[Dora]]'s cough, for example, was an imitation of her [[father]]'s.
    4 KB (607 words) - 02:57, 21 May 2019
  • ...t to the science of language, according to the first article of the bylaws of the Société [[linguistique]] de [[Paris]], composed in 1866. ...of the [[world]] by and for the [[speaking]] [[subject]]. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the [[distinction]] "<i>[[langage]]/langue</i>"—la
    9 KB (1,306 words) - 21:00, 23 May 2019
  • ...ect is, in fact, an attempt to refind it. For Lacan, however, the [[object of desire]] is located prior to desire and functions as its [[cause]]. ...chtung]]</i>) and [[displacement]] (<i>[[Verschiebung]]</i>) to the tropes of [[metaphor]] and [[metonymy]]. Thus he was able to conclude that "the [[unc
    6 KB (996 words) - 21:59, 27 May 2019
  • ...t to the science of language, according to the first article of the bylaws of the Société [[linguistique]] de [[Paris]], composed in 1866. ...of the [[world]] by and for the [[speaking]] [[subject]]. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the [[distinction]] "<i>[[langage]]/langue</i>"—la
    9 KB (1,306 words) - 01:01, 26 May 2019
  • ...ect is, in fact, an attempt to refind it. For Lacan, however, the [[object of desire]] is located prior to desire and functions as its [[cause]]. ...chtung]]</i>) and [[displacement]] (<i>[[Verschiebung]]</i>) to the tropes of [[metaphor]] and [[metonymy]]. Thus he was able to conclude that "the [[unc
    6 KB (994 words) - 23:58, 20 May 2019
  • ...ourse]] came to be seen as the founding document of the new [[school]] and of a new direction in psychoanalysis. ...ter]] as this clearly illustrates what he calls the subject as the subject of the signifier.
    35 KB (5,799 words) - 20:55, 25 May 2019
  • ...cques]]. [[Of Structure as an Inmixing of an Otherness Prerequisite to Any Subject Whatever]]. Talk at John Hopkins University, Baltimore. 1966. <http://www.l ...people present that do not understand English at all; for these my choice of English would be a security, but perhaps I would not wish them to be so sec
    26 KB (4,499 words) - 07:42, 12 September 2015
  • ...rned, whether or not it can be readily represented to the [[individual]] [[subject]]. Psychoanalytically, psychic temporality may be defined as the way psychi ...is is explained by the fact that the [[visual]] is the mode of inscription of the [[infant]]'s [[memory]].
    6 KB (797 words) - 00:24, 21 May 2019
  • Cynicism as a [[Form]] of [[Ideology]] ...ical mystification]]. The mask is not simply hiding the [[real]] [[state]] of things; the ideological [[distortion]] is written into its very [[essence]]
    6 KB (1,027 words) - 04:57, 24 May 2019
  • It is always perilous to approach [[Lacan]] from a [[philosophical]] point of view. For he is an anti-[[philosopher]], and no one is entitled to take thi ...nfrontation between Lacan and [[Heidegger]], which has all the attractions of a rhetorical [[impasse]].<br><br>
    30 KB (4,727 words) - 00:01, 26 May 2019
  • ...he huge shift in film theory and criticism that took [[place]] as a result of [[structuralist]]/semiotic debates in the late 1950s and 1960s. ...le on Young Mr. Lincoln (1969). In these essays and elsewhere on the pages of Cahiers, Althusserian [[Marxism]] became the dominant approach to understan
    38 KB (5,523 words) - 07:26, 24 May 2019
  • * [[desire of the analyst]] * [[end of analysis]]
    5 KB (427 words) - 14:56, 30 July 2006
  • [[Image:Lacan-algebra.jpg|thumb|right|[[List of algebraic symbols]]]] ...which appear principally in the [[matheme]]s, [[schema l]] and the [[graph of desire]], are listed below, together with their most common [[meaning]].
    4 KB (490 words) - 01:03, 26 May 2019
  • ==The Primacy of the Symbolic and the Unconscious== =====A Few General Remarks on Lacan's Theory of Language=====
    3 KB (369 words) - 01:04, 24 May 2019
  • ...s, bourgeois [[parents]], [[Alfred Lacan]] and [[Emilie Baudry]], a family of solid [[Catholic]] [[tradition]]. ...dry (1876–[[1948]]) (a middle-[[class]] Roman-Catholic family) (a family of solid Catholic tradition). -->
    71 KB (10,839 words) - 20:42, 25 May 2019
  • 1960-1964 (21 pp.)-POSITION DE L'INCONSCIENT (THE POSITION OF THE UNCONSCIOUS) 1966 ...us [[statement]]: "The unconscious, more than a language, is the condition of language" (p. 96).
    5 KB (738 words) - 21:13, 20 May 2019

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