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Enunciation

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{{Top}}énonciation{{Bottom}}
==The Statement and the Enunciation===Translator's Note=====In The [[linguisticsdistinction]], one important distinction is that between the [[enunciation]] ("''enonciationénoncé'') " and the "''énonciation''" is a common one in contemporary [[French]] [[statementthinking]] (''enonce'').
===The Statement===The "''Énoncé''", which is translated as "[[statement]] (", refers to the actual [[words]] uttered, "''enonceénonciation'') refers " to the actual act of uttering [[wordsthem]] uttered.
The [[statement]] is analysed in terms of abstract grammar, independent of the specific circumstances of occurrence.
===The ==Enunciationand Statement=====The In [[enunciationlinguistics|linguistic theory]] in [[Europe]] (''enonciation'') refers to , one important distinction is that between the act of uttering them.The [[enunciation]] is analyzed as an individual act performed by a particular speaker at a specific time/place, and in a specific situationthe [[statement]].
==The Subject==[[Lacanstatement]] designates refers to the [[enunciation]] as [[unconscious]], and affirms that the source of [[speech]] is not the [[ego]], nor [[consciousness]], but the [[unconscious]]actual words uttered; [[language]] comes from the [[Otherenunciation]], and refers to the idea that '[[I]]' am [[master]] act of my [[discourse]] is only an [[illusion]]uttering them.
The very word '=====Statement=====A [[Istatement]]' (''Je'') is ambiguous; as a [[shifterspeech]], it is both a analysed in [[signifier]] acting as [[subjectterms]] of the its abstract [[statement]], and an index which designates, but does not [[signifygrammatical]]units, independent of the [[subject]] specific circumstances of the [[enunciation]]occurrence.<ref>E, 298</ref>
The =====Enunciation=====An [[subjectenunciation]] is thus [[splitspeech]] [[analyzed]] as an [[individual]] between these two levels, divided in the very act of articulating the "I" that presents the performed by a [[illusionparticular]] of [[unityspeaker]] at a specific [[time]] / [[place]], and in a specific [[situation]].<ref>Sll, 139</ref>
==Examples===Jacques Lacan========Speech Act==Early Work=====Lacan focuses his attention on the dimension of the Long before [[enunciation]], the [[act]] of [[speakingLacan]] in itselfuses these terms, irrespective of the content of the utterancehe is aleady making a similar distinction.
In 1936, [[Lacan]] states for example, he stresses that the act of [[actspeech|speaking]] of speaking contains a [[meaning ]] in itself, even if the actual words spoken are "[[signification|meaningless]]."<ref>{{Ec}} p.83</ref>
[[Speech]], prior Prior to any function it may have in "conveying a [[message]]," [[speech]] is an appeal to the [[other]].
===Psychosis===In 1946This attention to the act of [[speech|speaking]] in itself, irrespective of the [[content]] of the utterance, anticipates [[Lacan uses the term 'enunciation]]' s attention to describe strange characteristics of psychotic language, with its "duplicity the [[dimension]] of the [[enunciation]]."<ref>{{Ec}} p.167</ref>
===Subject of the Unconscious==Psychotic Language=====In When [[Lacan]] does come to use the 1950sterm "[[enunciation]]" in 1946, the term it is used first of all to locate the describe strange characteristics of [[psychotic]] [[subject language]], with its "duplicity of the unconscious]]enunciation."<ref>{{Ec}} p. 167</ref>
=====Subject of the Unconscious=====Later, in the 1950s, the term is used to locate the [[subject]] of the [[unconscious]]. =====Graph of Desire=====In the [[graph of desire]], the lower [[signifying chain|chain]] is the [[statement]], which is [[speech]] in its [[conscious]] dimension, while the upper [[signifying chain|chain]] is "the unconscious enunciation."<ref>{{E}} p.316</ref> =====Unconscious Enunciation=====In designating the [[enunciation]] as [[unconscious]], [[Lacan]] affirms that the source of [[speech]] is not the [[ego]], nor [[consciousness]], but the [[unconscious]] ; [[language]] comes from the [[Other]], and the [[idea]] that "I" am [[master]] of my [[discourse]] is only an [[delusion|illusion]]. =====Subject of the Statement or Enunciation=====The very [[word]] "I" (''Je'') is ambiguous; as [[shifter]], it is both a [[signifier]] acting as [[subject]] of the [[statement]], and an [[index]] which designate, but does not [[signification|signify]], the [[subject]] of the [[enunciation]]."<ref>{{E}} p.316298</ref> =====Split Subject=====The [[subject]] is thus [[split]] between these two levels, [[division|divided]] in the very act of articulating the ''I'' that presents the [[delusion|illusion]] of [[unity]].<ref>{{S11}} p.139</ref> ==See Also=={{See}}* ''[[Cogito]]''* [[Consciousness]]* [[Discourse]]||* [[Ego]]* [[Graph of desire]]* [[Language]]||* [[Other]]* [[Psychosis]]* [[Shifter]]||* [[Signifying chain]]* [[Speech]]* [[Split]]||* [[Statement]]* [[Subject]]* [[Unconscious]]{{Also}}
==References==
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[[Category:Terms]]
[[Category:Concepts]]
[[Category:Subject]]
[[Category:Symbolic]]
[[Category:Psychoanalysis]]
[[Category:Jacques Lacan]]
[[Category:Linguistics]]
[[Category:Dictionary]]
[[Category:Language]]
[[Category:Symbolic]]
[[Category:Concepts]]
[[Category:Terms]]
[[Category:OK]]
 
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