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Lack

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==Translator's Note==
"''Manque''" is translated here as "lack", except in the expression, created by [[Lacan]], "''mangquemanque-à-être''", for which [[Lacan]] himself has proposed the [[English ]] neologism "[[want]]-to-be".
==Lack and Desire==
The term "[[lack]]" is always related, in [[Lacan]]'s teaching, to [[desire]].  It is a [[lack]] which causes [[desire]] to arise.<ref>{{S8}} p. 139</ref>  However, the precise [[nature ]] of what is [[lack]]ing varies over the course of [[Lacan]]'s [[Works of Jacques Lacan|work]].
==Lack of Being==
When the term first appears, in 1955, [[lack]] designates first and foremost a [[lack|lack of being]].  What is [[desire]]d is [[being]] itself. <blockquote>Desire is a relation of being to lack. The lack is the lack of being properly speaking. It isn't the lack of this or that, but lack of being whereby the being exists."<ref>{{S2}} p. 223</ref></blockquote>
[[Lacan]] returns <blockquote>Desire is a relation of being to this theme in 1958, when he argues that [[desire]] lack. The lack is the lack of being properly [[metonymyspeaking]] of . It isn't the [[lack|of this or that, but lack of being]] (''whereby the being [[lack|manque à êtreexists]]'')."<ref>{{ES2}} p. 259; translated by Sheridan as "want-to-be"223</ref></blockquote>
[[Lacan]] returns to this theme in 1958, when he argues that [[desire]] is the [[metonymy]] of the [[lack|lack of being]] (''[[lack|manque à être]]'').<ref>{{E}} p. 259; translated by [[Sheridan]] as "want-to-be"</ref> The [[subject]]'s [[lack|lack of being]] is "the heart of the [[analytic ]] [[experience]]" and "the very field in which the [[neurotic]]'s [[passion ]] is deployed.<ref>{{E}} p. 251</ref>  [[Lacan]] contrasts the [[lack|lack of being]], which relates to [[desire]], with the [[lack|lack of having]] (''[[lack|manque à avoir]]''), which relates to [[demand]].<ref>{{Ec}} p.730</ref>
==Lack of an Object==
In 1956, [[lack]] comes to designate the [[lack]] of an [[object]].  [[Lacan]] distinguishes between [[three ]] kinds of [[lack]], according to the nature of the [[object]] which is [[lack]]ing, as shown in the [[figure ]] below.<ref>{{S4}} p. 269</ref><!-- In the [[child]] as in the [[adult]], the lack of the object can appear in three specific modes: frustration, privation, and castration. In each of these three cases there is lack of the object, but in each [[case]] the nature of the lack is qualitatively different. The same is [[true]] of the type of object in question. -->
{| style="width:85%; height:200px" border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" align="center"
|+ '''[[:Image:Lacan-threelacks.jpg|Table of three types of lack of object]]'''<BR>
| align="center" | [[Symbolic]] [[phallus]]
|}
 
Of these three forms of [[lack]], [[castration]] is the most important from the point of view of [[treatment|analytic experience]], and the term "[[lack]]" tends to become synonymous with [[castration]].
In 1957, when [[Lacan]] introduces the [[algebraic]] [[symbol]] for the [[bar]]red [[Other]] (<strike>A</strike>), [[lack]] comes to designate the [[lack]] of a [[signifier]] in the [[Other]].  [[Lacan]] introduces the [[symbol]] '''S(<strike>A</strike>)''' to designate "the signifier of a lack in the Other."  No matter how many [[signifier]]s one adds to the [[signifying chain]], the [[chain]] is always [[lack|incomplete]]; it always [[lack]]s the [[signifier]] that could complete it.  This "[[lack|missing signifier]]" (written '''-1''' in [[Lacan]]ian [[algebra]]) is constitutive of the [[subject]].
==See Also==
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