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Graph of desire

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{| align="right" style="line-height:2.0em;margin-leftwidth:10px100%;text-align:rightjustify;"|style="width:100%;border:0px solid #cccccc;background-color:#fcfcfcffffff;bordervertical-align:1px solid #aaatop" | [[French]]: ''[[graphe du désir]] {|}  The width="100%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5"[[graph of desire]]style=" is a [[topology|topographical representation]] text-align:justify;vertical-align:top;background- [[topology|schema]] or [[topologycolor:#ffffff"|model]] - of the [[structure]] of [[desire]]. The [[graph of desire]] is a conceptual tool from the [[psychoanalysis|psychoanalytic theory]] of [[Jacques Lacan]]style="text-align:justify;color:#000;line-height:2The [[graph of desire]] is a [[topology5em;align:justify;"|topological representation]] of the [[structure]] of [[desire]]. The [[graph of desire]] is a [[topology|topological]] [[matheme|schemamodel]] of the [[structure]] of the constitution of the [[human]] [[subject]] and its [[desire]].
==History==
[[Jacques Lacan]] began to develop the [[graph of desire]] in his [[{{Y}}|1957]]-[[{{Y}}|58]] [[seminar]], ''[[Seminar V|Les formations de l'inconscient]]''.<ref>[[Jacques Lacan|Lacan, Jacques]]. ''[[Seminar V|Les formations de l'inconscient]]''. [[Seminar V|The Formations of the Unconscious]]. [[{{Y}}|1957]]-[[{{Y}}|58]]</ref> The [[graph of desire]] was first porposed reappears in a 1960 colloquiumsome of the following [[seminar]]s in various forms, although the most well known [[form]] of it appears in "[[The Subversion of the Subject and was later published the Dialectic of Desire in the Freudian Unconscious]]."<ref>[[Jacques Lacan|Lacan, Jacques]]. "[[Works of Jacques Lacan|Subversion du sujet et dialectique du désir dans l'inconscient freudien]]." ''[[EcritsÉcrits]]''.[[Paris]]: Seuil, 1966. p.793-827. "[[The subversion of the subject and the dialectic of desire in the Freudian unconscious]]." [[Ecrits: A Selection]]. Trans. Alan [[Sheridan]]. [[Bruce Fink]]. [[London]]: Tavistock. 1977. New York: W. W. Norton. 2004. p.292-325</ref>
The [[graph of desire]] is a schema==Four Stages==In this paper, or model, that [[Jacques Lacan]] began developing in his builds up the [[seminar]] on [[Seminar V|The Formations graph of the Unconsciousdesire]].<ref>{{LB}} in four [[Seminar V|The Formations of the Unconsciousstages]]. [[{{Y}}|1957]]-[[{{Y}}|58]]</ref>
===Elementary Cell===The first of these stages in the "[[graph of desire|elementary cell]] was gradually developed by [[Lacan]] in " of the course of two successive [[seminars]]: [[Seminar V|The Formations graph of the Unconscious]] and [[Seminar VIdesire|Desire and its Interpretationgraph]].<ref>{{E}} p.303</ref>
The horizontal line represents the [[Lacandiachronic]] first develops the [[graph of desiresignifying chain]] in [[Seminar V|; the seminar of 1957horseshoe-8]] in order to illustrate shaped line represents the [[psychoanalytic theory]] vector of the [[jokesubject]]'s.<ref>[[Freud|Freud, Sigmund]]. ''[[Works of Sigmund Freud|Jokes and their Relation to the Unconscious]]," 1905. [[SEintention]] VIIIality.</ref>
The [[graph double]] intersection of these two lines illustrates the [[nature]] of desire[[time|graphretroaction]]: the [[message]] reappears , at the point marked '''s(A)''' in some of the following [[seminarsgraph of desire|elementary cell]], but then all but disappears from is the ''[[Lacanpoint de capiton]]'s ' determined [[Works of Jacques Lacantime|workretroactively]]by the [[particular]] [[punctuation]] given to it by the [[Other]], '''A'''.
He refers to the basic schema once again in "The [[linguistic|prelinguistic]] [[mythical]] [[The Subversion subject]] of pure [[need]], indicated by the Subject and [[triangle]], must [[pass]] through the Dialectic defiles of Desire in the Freudian Unconscious[[signifier]] which produces the [[divided]] [[subject]], '''$'''."
It achieved its definitive form in his essay "===Intermediate Stages===The intermediate stages of the [[The Subversion graph of desire]] are not meant to show any [[progress|evolution]] or [[development|temporal development]], since the Subject and [[graph of desire|graph]] always [[exists]] as a [[whole]]; they are simply pedagogical devices used by [[Lacan]] in [[order]] to illustrate the Dialectic [[structure]] of Desire in the Freudian Unconscious[[graph of desire|complete graph]]."<ref>{{LBE}} "[[The Subversion of the Subject and the Dialectic of Desire in the Freudian Unconscious]]p." 1960315</ref>
The [[graph of desire|graph]] appears in various formsNevertheless, although the most well known form of it appears in "[[The subversion of the subject and the dialectic of desire in the Freudian unconscious]]."<ref>[[Lacan, Jacques]]. "[[Works never intended to describe the genetic stages of Jacques Lacan|Subversion du sujet et dialectique du désir dans l'inconscient freudien]]." ''a [[Écritsbiological]]''. Paris: Seuil, 1966. p.793-827. "[[The subversion of the subject and the dialectic of desire in the Freudian unconsciousdevelopment]]." [[Ecrits: A Selection]]. Trans. Alan Sheridan. Bruce Fink. London: Tavistock. 1977. New York: W. W. Norton. 2004. p.292-325</ref>
==Development==It depends on ideas developed originally in Lacan's Schema RRather, a graph in which fundamental organizing sturctures it represents the "[[logical]] moments" of the human mind are shown in a schematic relationship to the registers which in turn structure human reality: the [[imaginarybirth]], the of a [[symbolicspeaking]] and the [[realsubject]].
===Complete Graph==The [[graph of desire]] is a 'flattened' representation of a [[signifying chain]] as it crosses a pathway [[Lacan]] called a vector of [[desire].=
It appears as two curved lines which cross In the [[completed graph]] there are not one another at but two separate points[[signifying chain]]s.
Each line has a symbolic meaningThe lower [[chain]] (from the [[signifier]] to the [[voice]]) is the [[conscious]] [[signifying chain]], the level of the [[statement]].
==Development== The upper [[Lacanchain]] builds up the (from ''[[graph of desirejouissance]] in four stages. Its four successive stages represent the constitution of the '' to [[humancastration]] ) is the [[subjectsignifying chain]] and his [[desire]]. Nevertheless, [[Lacan]] never intended it to describe in the [[biology|geneticunconscious]] [[development|stages]] of a [[biology|biological]] [[development]]. Rather, it represents the "[[time|logical moments]]" level of the [[development|birth]] of a [[speech|speaking]] [[subjectenunciation]].
The [[structure]] is thus duplicated: the upper part of the [[graph]] is [[structured]] exactly like the lower part.
==See Also==
* [[Signifying Chain]]
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* [[Structure]]
* [[Subject]]
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* [[Unconscious]]
* [[Topology]]
{{Also}}
==References==
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| [[French]]: ''[[graphe du désir]]
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[[Category:Dictionary]]
[[Category:Psychoanalysis]]
[[Category:Jacques Lacan]]
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