Difference between revisions of "Graph of desire"

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==History==
 
==History==
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[[Jacques Lacan]] began to develop the [[graph of desire]] in his [[{{Y}}|1957]]-[[{{Y}}|58]] [[seminar]], ''[[Seminar V|Les formations de l'inconscient]]''.
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[[Jacques Lacan]] gradually developed the [[graph of desire]] in the course of two successive [[seminars]]: [[Seminar V|The Formations of the Unconscious]] and [[Seminar VI|Desire and its Interpretation]].
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[[Jacques Lacan]] first proposed the [[graph of desire]] in his [[{{Y}}|1957]]-[[{{Y}}|58]] [[seminar]], ''[[Seminar V|Les formations de l'inconscient]]''.
 
[[Jacques Lacan]] first proposed the [[graph of desire]] in his [[{{Y}}|1957]]-[[{{Y}}|58]] [[seminar]], ''[[Seminar V|Les formations de l'inconscient]]''.
 
The [[graph of desire]] is first developed by [[Jacques Lacan]] in his [[{{Y}}|1957]]-[[{{Y}}|58]] [[seminar]], ''[[Seminar V|Les formations de l'inconscient]]''.
 
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==

Revision as of 11:50, 19 October 2006

The graph of desire is a topological model of the structure of desire.

History

Jacques Lacan began to develop the graph of desire in his 1957-58 seminar, Les formations de l'inconscient.

Jacques Lacan gradually developed the graph of desire in the course of two successive seminars: The Formations of the Unconscious and Desire and its Interpretation.

Jacques Lacan first proposed the graph of desire in his 1957-58 seminar, Les formations de l'inconscient.

See Also

References


French: graphe du désir
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