Difference between revisions of "Extimacy"

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Lacan coins the term 'extimacy' (''extimitÈ'') by applying the prefix ex (from exterieur, 'exterior') to the French word intimitÈ ('intimacy').  
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The term '[[extimacy]]' ([[French]]:''extimitè'') is coined by [[Jacques Lacan]] by combining the prefix 'ex' (from ''exterieur'' or 'exterior') to the French word ''intimitè'' ('intimacy').
  
The resulting neologism, which may be rendered 'extimacy' in English, neatly expresses the way in which psychoanalysis problematises the opposition between inside and outside, between container and contained.<ref>see S7, 139</ref>  
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This neologism indicates the manner in which psychoanalysis problematizes the opposition between inside and outsider.<ref>S7, 139</ref>  
  
 
For example, the [[real]] is just as much inside as outside, and the [[unconscious]] is not a purely interior psychic system but an [[intersubjectivity|intersubjective]] [[structure]] ('the unconscious is outside').  
 
For example, the [[real]] is just as much inside as outside, and the [[unconscious]] is not a purely interior psychic system but an [[intersubjectivity|intersubjective]] [[structure]] ('the unconscious is outside').  
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Rhe [[Other]] is "something strange to me, although it is at the heart of me."<ref>S7, 71</ref>
  
Again, the [[Other]] is "something strange to me, although it is at the heart of me."<ref>S7, 71</ref>  
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Furthermore, the center of the [[subject]] is outside; the subject is ex-centric.<ref>see E, 165, 171</ref>
  
Furthermore, the centre of the subject is outside; the subject is ex-centric.<ref>see E, 165, 171</ref>
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The structure of [[extimacy]] is perfectly expressed in the [[topology]] of the [[torus]] and of the [[moebius strip]].
 
 
The structure of extimacy is perfectly expressed in the topology of the TORUs and of the [[moebius strip]].
 
 
 
The concept of extimacy has been further developed by [[Jacques-Alain Miller]] in his seminar of 1985-6.
 
  
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Lacan goes beyond Freud. Not a beyond Freud which leaves Freud behind; it is a beyond Freud which is nevertheless in Freud. Lacan is looking for something in Freud's work of which Freud himself was unaware. Something which we may call "extimate," as it is so very intimate that Freud himself was not aware of it. So very intimate that this intimacy is extimate. It is an internal beyond.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 01:06, 11 June 2006

The term 'extimacy' (French:extimitè) is coined by Jacques Lacan by combining the prefix 'ex' (from exterieur or 'exterior') to the French word intimitè ('intimacy').

This neologism indicates the manner in which psychoanalysis problematizes the opposition between inside and outsider.[1]

For example, the real is just as much inside as outside, and the unconscious is not a purely interior psychic system but an intersubjective structure ('the unconscious is outside'). Rhe Other is "something strange to me, although it is at the heart of me."[2]

Furthermore, the center of the subject is outside; the subject is ex-centric.[3]

The structure of extimacy is perfectly expressed in the topology of the torus and of the moebius strip.

Lacan goes beyond Freud. Not a beyond Freud which leaves Freud behind; it is a beyond Freud which is nevertheless in Freud. Lacan is looking for something in Freud's work of which Freud himself was unaware. Something which we may call "extimate," as it is so very intimate that Freud himself was not aware of it. So very intimate that this intimacy is extimate. It is an internal beyond.

References

  1. S7, 139
  2. S7, 71
  3. see E, 165, 171