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Seminar XX

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{{S}}[[Image:Sem20.jpgSeminarsNavBar|RightPrevLink=Seminar XIX|thumbRightPrevText=Seminar XIX|250pxRightNextLink=Seminar XXI|right]]RightNextText=Seminar XXI}}
* ''Le séminaire, Livre XX{| align="center" style="width:500px; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"|-| style="width:100px;text-align:center; line-height:2.0em; padding-left: Encore, 10px;"| 1972-1973''| style="width:100px;text-align:center; line-height:2. Paris0em; padding-left: Editions du Seuil10px;"| [[Seminar XX]]| style="width:300px;text-align:center; line-height:2. 1975.English version0em; padding-left: 10px;"| ''The [[Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book XX: |Encore, On Feminine Sexuality, The Limits of Love and Knowledge 1972-1973]]''<BR><big>[[Seminar XX|Encore]]</big>|}<!--{| class="floatright" style="float:right;margin-left:0px; margin-right:auto"| [[Image:Sem. EdXX. Jjpg|border|300px|right]][[Image:The_seminar_of_jacques_lacan_book_xx_encore_bruce_fink_2.jpg|border|300px|right]]|}-A->[[Image:Sem. MillerXX. Transjpg|border|300px|right]]==Introduction to Encore==<small>''(The following is an excerpt from an [https://www. Blacan. Fink. New York: Norton, 1998com/symptom14/introduction-to.html "Introduction to Encore" by Francois Regnault])''</small><BR>
On Feminine Sexuality the Limits of Love and Knowledge: The ===''Jouissance''===The ''Seminar of '' XX, which [[Jacques lacan|Jacques Lacan]] called ''Encore'', was delivered between December 12, Book XX Encore 1972-1973 (Seminar and June 26, 1975. It takes [[place]] at a turning point in French [[politics]] after the events of May 68, and in the teaching of [[Jacques lacan|Jacques Lacan, Bk 20)]]. [...]
In ''Encore'' (whose cover shows Bernini's ''The Ecstasy of Saint Theresa'' as it stands in the [[Church]] of Santa Maria della Vittoria in Rome) the puzzle of the [[discourses]] recurs again and again, but the issue unfolds in the [[dimension]] that rules Lacan's teaching at least since ''Seminar'' XVI ''D'un [[Autre]] à l'autre''—''From an Other to the other''— (just before [[1968]]!) until its very end, until it becomes almost the dominant [[category]], that is ''jouissance''. (''Jouissance''posited as an absolute, see Chapter XIII of the ''[[Seminar XVI]]'').
{| class=Thus this is no wonder that ''jouissance'' (of which one must not forget the [[legal]] origin, fruit and tenure) is introduced early in its opposition to the functional: "toccolours" style="float: right; clear: right; margin: 0 0 0''Jouissance'' is what is useless.5em 1em;"|+ style="font-size: larger; margin-left: 1em;"||- style="vertical-align: top;"|style="background: #CCCCCC;" colspan="3" align=center|The [[superego]], the [[concept]] of [[Freud]]'s second [[topography]] to which he gave a repressive [[meaning]] ([[Kant]]'s [[Moral]] Law), Lacan did not consider it less brutal, but he also deems it [[obscene]], and changes its orientation by enjoining it ''Jouis!'' (Yes, I mean the Law, I heard, ''Downloadj'ouis''|- style="vertical-align, her [[voice]], and she becomes my [[desire]]). And soon taking up residence in the field of sexuality, this approach brings about the following statements: top;a) "|* The ''jouissance'' of the Other, of the Other's [[body]] that symbolizes it, is not a [[http://{{Archive}}/seminaireXX/1972sign]] of love.11" b) "Ultimately, one person's body is just a part of the Other's body.21" c) Finally,"…it is the Other who ''jouit''.pdf 1972"<ref>Lacan J.11.21.pdf, Encore, [[The Seminar]]* of [http[Jacques lacan|Jacques Lacan]], Book XX, 1972-1973, New York://{{Archive}}/seminaireXX/1972W.12W.19Norton, 1998, p.pdf 197223.12</ref> Then, "there is a [[hole]] there and that hole is called the Other.19"<ref>''Ibid'', p.pdf113</ref>]* Later on Lacan will declare that "the Other doesn't [[http://{{Archive}}/seminaireXX/1973exist]].01.09.pdf 1973.01.09.pdf]|}"
==Back Cover=Sexuality===[[Lacan]] takes us 3. From then on a startling psycholinguistic exploration of the bounds of [[loverelationship]] and between ''jouissance'' and sexuality is articulated (according to a [[knowledgetopology]]. Often controversial, always inspiredthat will be developed later on in the seminar), a relationship which cannot be reduced to the [[Frenchmale]] and [[intellectualfemale]] [[Jacques Lacan]] begins orgasms, but one that will meet the twentieth year obstacle of his famous [[Seminarchoice]] set up by weighing theories of the relationship between the [[desirepsychoanalysis]] for , namely that "there is no [[lovesexual relationship]] " and the attainment that will be resolved by way of [[knowledge]] from such influential and diverse thinkers as [[Aristotle]]love, made up for its [[Marx]], and [[Freudabsence]]. From here he leads us through "What makes up the [[mathematics]], [[philosophy]], [[religionSexual Relationship|sexual relationship]]is, andquite precisely, naturally, [[psychoanalysis]] into an entirely new and unexpected way of interpreting the two most fundamental [[human]] [[drive]]slove. Anticipated by English-speaking readers for more than twenty years, this annotated translation presents [[Lacan]]"<ref>''Ibid''s most sophisticated work on [[love]], p. 44</ref>[[desireImage:The_seminar_of_jacques_lacan_book_xx_encore_bruce_fink_2.jpg|border|300px|right]], and [[jouissance]].
4. The ''Seminar'' XX performs as a theory on ''jouissance'' in its [[complex]] relationship with love, where Freud's emphasis on [[narcissism]] remains evident, and where the opposition between desire and love's [[demand]], which dominated the so-called "classical" [[Lacanian]] theory (we propose here a rather flexible periodization), is [[being]] [[displaced]] to a more central articulation and perhaps to a more consistent involvement with the deepening of the [[clinic]]: the opposition between phallic ''jouissance'', and that other ''jouissance'', the one Lacan named "supplementary ''jouissance''."<ref>''Ibid'', p. 72</ref> It will allow Lacan (in Chapter VI of the Seminar "God and Woman([[barred]]) ''Jouissance''") to assign to the mystical a point of fall (or) of [[real]]. As a result, the reputed mystical [[delusions]] are just "mere business of fucking."
==Description=Phallic ''jouissance'' vs. feminine ''jouissance''===If phallic ''Seminar XXjouissance'' is  can encapsulate as a [[whole]] and in its more persistent [[meanings]] a whole range of [[psychoanalytic]] issues such as [[orgasm]] [[pleasure]], the pleasure [[principle]], sexual [[Lacansatisfaction]]'s major work on , sexual [[femininefetishism]] , [[sexualityperversion]], etc., it has now to contend with this other dimension of itself, one that is often considered enigmatic, an other ''jouissance'', one called the other ''jouissance''.
In particular he explores 5. So there, psychoanalysis feels embarrassed with this other ''jouissance'', and the following [[statement]] reveals the discomfort: "Were there another ''jouissance'' than phallic ''jouissance'', it shouldn't be/could never fail to be that one." From there on the [[paradox]] is established: in fact there is no other than phallic ''jouissance'' (such as orgasm, detumescence, the question primacy of the [[femininephallus]] , etc.) "except the one concerning which woman doesn't breathe a [[desireword]] ." Psychoanalysis therefore assumes here that was absent woman is capable of an unverifiable ''jouissance'', other (other than the one Charles de Brosses, a libertine from the eighteenth century, boasted to recognize in the traits of Bernini's ''Saint Theresa''). It is then necessary to Lacan to resort to a Stoic [[logic]] according to which [[truth]] is deduced from his earlier theory the [[false]]: "Suppose that there is [[another]] ([[true]]!)—but there isn't (false!)." The [[doubt]] remains, after all, and it weighs heavily: the male is intrigued and ponders over the [[notion]] that woman is not, is never whole, or ''encore'' that The woman (as a whole) does not exist. "There is a ''jouissance'' that is hers (the woman), that belongs to that ‘she' that doesn't exist and doesn't [[signify]] anything."<ref>''Ibid'', p. 74</ref> Hence the [[idea]] that we are dealing with "a ''jouissance'' that is in the realm of the infinite."<ref>''Ibid'', p. 103</ref>  And "Why not [[phallusinterpret]] one face of the [[Other, the]]God face, as based on feminine ''jouissance''?"<ref>''Ibid'', p. 77</ref>
It is a short ==21 Novembre 1972==First [[session]]. « [[About]] [[jouissance]] ». Published in [[french]] as early as in 1975, Encore may be the most emblematic [[seminarLacan]] with only 11 presentations and many 's Séminaire. First, plenty of these [[ideas]] developped in it are rather enigmatic significant and aphoristicwill renew psychoanlytic [[theory]] for years; then, if they are not read Lacan's style reaches its highest point in relation to the discussion countless ways he distorts [[language]] and plays with it. During Encore, the final [[formalization]] of the non-[[existence]] of the [[courtly lovesexual]] rapport (with the [[sexuation]] in ''[[Seminar VIIformulas]]'' table) and the formulation [[full]] completion of jouissance's theory will progressively give way to what will become the topologic period of Lacan's teaching. In the end of Encore, he introduces his famous booromean [[jouissanceknot]]on which he'' and ll [[drivework]] in ''during his last 8 years. The US edition is called The [[Seminar XI]]'', Book XX : On [[feminine]] [[sexuality]], the limits of [[love]] and [[knowledge]] : Encore. In this first session, Lacan speaks about love and jouissance.
''[[Seminar XX]]'' develops ==20 Février 1973==A central (and really beautiful) session in this central Séminaire. Lacan speaks about the idea that specificity of the '[[woman does not existfeminine jouissance]]' and that she the mystical jouissance. In the published version, the chapter is 'called "Dieu et la jouissance de La [[not-wholeFemme]]', but also goes beyond " ("God and the discussions jouissance of The [[feminineWoman]] »).extract : "And why not [[sexualityinterpreting]] to consider a face of the relationship between ''[[jouissanceOther]]'' and , the face of God, like supported by feminine jouissance".<noautolinks>==English translation==<!-- {{Right|<pdf width="425px" height="600px">File:THE-SEMINAR-OF-JACQUES-LACAN-XX.pdf</pdf>}} -->An English [[lovetranslation]] and the idea of ''[[jouissanceSeminar]]'' as the ultimate VIII was made by a [[limitreading]] of group associated with [http://www.lacaninireland.com ''Jacques Lacan in Ireland''] and Cormac Gallagher from unedited French manuscripts, and arranged in a presentable [[humanform]] by Tony Hughes.* [http://www.lacaninireland.com/web/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/Book-20-Encore.pdf Download] ([knowledgehttps://mega.nz/#!CKxG2SiJ!vJFAafWuS2H3jc_xnKoCy85PsGPWXbS6IS0ZMJV9rIA Mirror])* [http://www.lacaninireland.com/web/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/THE-SEMINAR-OF-JACQUES-LACAN-XX.pdf Download](Different version) ([https://mega.nz/#!qGxm1ATb!mlYBteaY8wEVnZ0EWrMgL6cxZHIQH7xc3ZnPxom8vzU Mirror])
In the seminar ''{| class="wikitable sortable" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="width:100%;"!Author(s)!Title!Publisher!Year!Pages!Language!Size!Filetype!Downloads|-|[[EncoreJacques Lacan]], Jacques-Alain Miller, Bruce Fink|On Feminine Sexuality, the Limits of Love and Knowledge: The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book XX, Encore<BR>''<small>0393319164, 9780393319163, 0393045730, 9780393045734</small>''| W. W. Norton & Company|1999|160<BR>[81]|English|2 Mb|pdf|[Lacanhttp://library1.org/_ads/7EC56978C42E71371057773B7DC7462B 1], [http://libgen.io/get.php?md5=7EC56978C42E71371057773B7DC7462B 2] proposed what he called ", [http://b-ok.cc/md5/7EC56978C42E71371057773B7DC7462B 3],[formulas of sexuationhttp://libgen.me/item/detail/id/407220 4], [http://bookfi.net/md5/7EC56978C42E71371057773B7DC7462B 5]" to set down the basic structures of |-|[[maleJacques Lacan]] , Jacques-Alain Miller, Bruce Fink|On Feminine Sexuality, the Limits of Love and Knowledge: The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book XX, Encore<BR>''<small>0393319164, 9780393319163, 0393045730, 9780393045734</small>''| W. W. Norton & Company|1999|159<BR>[81]|English|3 Mb|pdf|[femalehttp://library1.org/_ads/B66014C84ADAB94C311841582FE20301 1], [http://libgen.io/get.php?md5=B66014C84ADAB94C311841582FE20301 2] , [http://b-ok.cc/md5/B66014C84ADAB94C311841582FE20301 3], [sexualityhttp://libgen.me/item/detail/id/500430 4], [http://bookfi.net/md5/B66014C84ADAB94C311841582FE20301 5].|}
==Contents==
# On jouissance
# To Jakobson
## Linguistricks
## The sign that one is changing discourses
## Signifierness by the bucketfull
## The stupidity of the signifier
## The enjoying substance
# The function of the written
## The unconscious is what is read
## On the use of letters
## S/s
## Ontology, the master's discourse
## Speaking of fucking
## The unreadable
# Love and the signifier
## The other sex
## Contingency of the signifier, routine of the signified
## The end of the world and the "para-being"
## Love makes up for the absence of the sexual relationship
## The ones
# Aristotle and Freud: the other satisfaction
## Aristotle's headache (tracas)
## The deficiency of jouissance and the satisfaction of blah-blah.
## Development, the hypothesis of mastery.
## Jouissance is inappropriate to the sexual relationship.
# God and Woman's jouissance
## Reading-loving, hating
## Materialists
## Jouissance of being
## The male, polymorphous pervert
## Mystics
# A love letter
## Coalescence and scission of ''a'' and S(<strike>A</strike>)
## The beyondsex
## Speaking ot no avail
## Psychoanalysis is not a cosmology
## Knowledge of jouissance
# Knowledge and truth
## Hateloving (''l'hainamoration'')
## Knowledge about truth
## Contingency of the phallic function
## Freud's charity
## Getting of on knowledge
## The unconscious and woman
# On the Baroque
## Where it speaks, it enjoys, and it knows nothing
# Rings of string
# The rat in the maze
## Language is knowledge's harebrained lucubration
## About Llanguage
## The unity of the body
## The Lacanian hypothesis
## Love, from contingency to necessity
=== Related ===
{| class="wikitable sortable" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="5" style="width:100%;"
| Bruce Fink, Suzanne Barnard, Jacques Lacan
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|[[State]] [[University]] of New York Press
|2002
|200<BR>[199]
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|[http://library1.org/_ads/0D2D791F3296F83A22863ACA62C21D43 1], [http://libgen.io/get.php?md5=0D2D791F3296F83A22863ACA62C21D43 2], [http://b-ok.cc/md5/0D2D791F3296F83A22863ACA62C21D43 3], [http://libgen.me/item/detail/id/578498 4], [http://bookfi.net/md5/0D2D791F3296F83A22863ACA62C21D43 5]
|-
| Bruce Fink, Suzanne Barnard, Jacques Lacan
|''<sup>SUNY Series in Psychoanalysis & [[Culture]]</sup>''<BR>Reading Seminar XX: Lacan's Major Work on Love, Knowledge, and Feminine Sexuality
|State University of New York Press
|2002
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|[http://library1.org/_ads/A187B6D706989FA24C76382505FF0607 1], [http://libgen.io/get.php?md5=A187B6D706989FA24C76382505FF0607 2], [http://b-ok.cc/md5/A187B6D706989FA24C76382505FF0607 3], [http://libgen.me/item/detail/id/1358995 4], [http://bookfi.net/md5/A187B6D706989FA24C76382505FF0607 5]
|-
| Bruce Fink, Suzanne Barnard, Jacques Lacan
|''<sup>SUNY Series in Psychoanalysis & [[Culture]]</sup>''<BR>Reading Seminar XX: Lacan's Major Work on Love, Knowledge, and Feminine Sexuality
|State University of New York Press
|2002
|192
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|17 Mb
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|[http://library1.org/_ads/E9EF7EFE2FC1DA8B0CB148B3C81B052C 1], [http://libgen.io/get.php?md5=E9EF7EFE2FC1DA8B0CB148B3C81B052C 2], [http://b-ok.cc/md5/E9EF7EFE2FC1DA8B0CB148B3C81B052C 3], [http://libgen.me/item/detail/id/1429608 4], [http://bookfi.net/md5/E9EF7EFE2FC1DA8B0CB148B3C81B052C 5]
|}
==See AlsoFrench (Text & Audio)=={| class="wikitable floatright" width="600px" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" align="center" style="width:600px;float:right;margin-left:10px;line-height:2.0em; padding-left:60px; background:#ffffff; text-align:center;"|-| width="250px" style="padding-left:10px" | Date| width="250px" style="padding-left:10px" | Title| width="50px" style="padding-left:10px" | PDF| width="50px" style="padding-left:10px" | MP3|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/21_Novembre_1972|21 Novembre 1972]]| De la jouissance| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1972.11.21.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1972.11.21.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/12_décembre_1972|12 décembre 1972]]| Complément<BR>Et début de la séance suivante: la bêtise Exposé de Recanati paru dans Scilicet n° 5 -Seuil| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1972.12.12.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1972.12.12.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/19_décembre_1972|19 décembre 1972]]| A Jakobson| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1972.12.19.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1972.12.19.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/09_janvier_1973|09 janvier 1973]]| La fonction de l'écrit| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.01.09.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.01.09.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/16_janvier_1973|16 janvier 1973]]| L'amour et le signifiant| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.01.16.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.01.16.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/13_février_1973|13 février 1973]]| Aristote et Freud: l'Autre satisfaction| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.02.13.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.02.13.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/20_février_1973|20 février 1973]]| Dieu et la jouissance de la femme| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.02.20.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.02.20.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/13_mars_1973|13 mars 1973]]| Une lettre d'âmour| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.03.13.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.03.13.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/20_mars_1973|20 mars 1973]]| Le savoir et la vérité| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.03.20.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.03.20.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/10_avril 1973|10 avril 1973]]| Complément<BR>Début de la séance suivante: La position de linguiste<BR>Fin de la séance: Remerciement| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.04.10.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.04.10.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/08_mai_1973|08 mai 1973]]| Du baroque| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.05.08.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.05.08.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/15_mai_1973|15 mai 1973]]| Ronds de ficelle | [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.05.15.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.05.15.mp3 mp3]|-| [[Text/Jacques_Lacan/Encore/26_juin_1973|26 juin 1973]]| Le rat dans le labyrinthe| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.06.26.pdf pdf]| [http://{{archive}}/seminaireXX/1973.06.26.pdf pdf]|}* [[:File:S20_ENCORE.pdf|Download]] - Sources: critical version established by E.L.P., audio recordings of the sessions on the site of [https://valas.fr Patrick VALAS], a reading by Christian Fierens.* [[:File:Seminaire_20.pdf|Download]] - Source: http://ecole-lacanienne.net* [[:File:ENCORE_VRMNAGRLSOFAFBYPMB.pdf|Download]] -- Transcription of the first seven sessions of this seminar, conducted from 1991 to 1998 by VRMNAGRLSOFAFBYPMB. The sources used were the notes of CC, DA, EP, the stenotype for the four first sessions, the Gabbay version and audio tape recordings.<!--<BR>{{Center|<pdf width="425px" height="600px">File:Seminaire_20.pdf</pdf><pdf width="425px" height="600px">File:S20_ENCORE.pdf</pdf>}}-->
{| class="wikitable" style="margin-right:auto;margin-left:auto;width:500px" width="500px" align="right"
| Audio Recordings of Lacan's Seminars
|-
|{{#widget:MEJS13
|url1=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1972.11.21.mp3
|url2=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1972.12.12.mp3
|url3=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1972.12.19.mp3
|url4=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1973.01.09.mp3
|url5=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1973.01.16.mp3
|url6=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1973.02.13.mp3
|url7=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1973.02.20.mp3
|url8=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1973.03.13.mp3
|url9=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1973.03.20.mp3
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|url13=http://archive.nosubject.com/seminaires/seminaireXX/1973.06.26.mp3
|title1=1972.11.21
|title2=1972.12.12
|title3=1972.12.19
|title4=1973.01.09
|title5=1973.01.16
|title6=1973.02.13
|title7=1973.02.20
|title8=1973.03.13
|title9=1973.03.20
|title10=1973.04.10
|title11=1973.05.08
|title12=1973.05.15
|title13=1973.06.26
}}
|}
<!--
1969-1970
<b>Le séminaire, Livre XVII: L'envers de la [[psychanalyse]].</b><br>
French: (texte établi par Jacques-[[Alain]] [[Miller]]), [[Paris]]: Seuil, 1991.<br>
[[English]]: unpublished.
{| style="width:100%; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"
|width="100%"| [[Jacques Lacan|Lacan, Jacques]]. [[Seminar I|The Seminar of Jacques Lacan: Book II : The Ego in Freud's Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis 1954-1955 (Seminar of Jacques Lacan)]]. Ed. [[Jacques-Alain Miller]]. Trans. [[Sylvana Tomaselli]]. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1991. Paperback, Language: English, ISBN: 0393307093. <small><small>Buy it at [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393307093/nosubject-20/ Amazon.com], [http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393307093/nosub07-20/ Amazon.ca], [http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393307093/nosub-21/ Amazon.de], [http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393307093/nosubjencyofl-21/ Amazon.co.uk] or [http://www.amazon.fr/exec/obidos/ASIN/0393307093/nosub04-21/ Amazon.fr].</small></small>
|}
<BR>
{| style="width:100%; border:1px solid #aaa;text-align:left; line-height:2.0em; padding-left:10px;"
|width="100%"| [[Jacques Lacan|Lacan, Jacques]]. [[Seminar I|Le séminaire, Livre II: Le moi dans la théorie de Freud et dans la technique de la psychanalyse]]. Ed. [[Jacques-Alain Miller]]. Paris: Seuil, 1977. 374 pages, Language: French, ISBN: 2020047276. <small><small>Buy it at [http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/2020047276/nosubject-20/ Amazon.com], [http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/2020047276/nosub07-20/ Amazon.ca], [http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/2020047276/nosub-21/ Amazon.de], [http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/2020047276/nosubjencyofl-21/ Amazon.co.uk] or [http://www.amazon.fr/exec/obidos/ASIN/2020047276/nosub04-21/ Amazon.fr].</small></small>
|}
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==References==
<references/>* [[Žižek, Slavoj]]. (2000) [[The Fragile Absolute]], or Why the Christian Legacy is Worth Fighting For, London and New York: Verso. p. 115, 116, 118, 143  [[Category:Psychoanalysis]][[Category:Jacques Lacan]][[Category:Seminars]][[Category:Sexuality]][[Category:Works]]
[[Category:Seminars]] [[Category:Jacques Lacan]]</noautolinks>
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