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Inversion

19 bytes added, 21:14, 17 August 2006
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==Sigmund Freud==
[[Freud]] uses the term "[[inversion]]" ([[Fr]]. ''[[inversion]]'') to designate [[homosexuality]], the idea being that [[homosexuality]] is the [[inverse]] of [[heterosexuality]].
==Jacques Lacan==
[[Lacan]] uses the term in this sense too in his early works.<ref>Lacan. {{L}} 1938. p.109</ref>
===More===
However, in [[Lacan]]'s post-war works the term is used in quite a different sense.
[[Inversion]] then usually refers to a characteristic of the [[specular image]].
What appears on one side of the [[real]] [[body]] appears on the other side of the [[image]] of the [[body]] reflected in the [[mirror]].<ref>Lacan. {{L}} 1951b. p.15</ref>
By extension, [[inversion]] becomes a quality of all [[imaginary]] phenomena, such as [[transitivism]].
Hence [[Lacan]]'s definition of [[analytic]] [[communication]] in which the sender receives his own [[message]] in an [[inversion|inverted form]].
===More===
In 1957, both senses of the term are brought together in [[Lacan]]'s discussion of [[Leonardo da Vinci]].
Taking up [[Freud]]'s argument about [[Leonardo]]'s [[homosexuality]].<ref>Freud. {{F}} 1910c.</ref>
[[Lacan]] goes on to argue that [[Leonardo]]'s [[specular]] [[identification]] was highly unusual in that it resulted in an [[inversion]] of the positions (on [[schema L]]) of the [[ego]] and the [[little other]].<ref>{{S4}} p.433-4</ref>
[[Category:Jacques Lacan]]
[[Category:Dictionary]]
[[Category:TermsSexuality]]
[[Category:Concepts]]
[[Category:SexualityTerms]]
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