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| + | |width="100%"| [[Slavoj Žižek|Žižek, Slavoj]]. ''The Metastases of Enjoyment: Six Essays on Woman and Causality''. London and New York: Verso. 1994. |
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| [[Image:MetastasesEnjoyment-large.jpg |right|frame]] | | [[Image:MetastasesEnjoyment-large.jpg |right|frame]] |
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− | =Source=
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− | Žižek, S. (1994) The Metastases of Enjoyment: Six Essays on Woman and
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− | Causality, London and New York: Verso.
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− | =Review by [http://www.lacan.com/zizekchro2.htm Tony Myers]=
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− | This is one of Žižek's most rewarding books as it covers a range of
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− | crucial topics from the cause of the subject through the role of the super-
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− | ego to the impossibility of the sexual relationship. In each of the six
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− | essays, Žižek begins by asking (and ultimately answering) the kind of
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− | basic questions that anyone interested in Lacanian psychoanalysis sooner
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− | or later wants to know the answers to. In the spirit of this fundamental
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− | questioning, the book's Appendix contains a self-interview in which
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− | Žižek poses to himself the kind of queries that bother what he terms
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− | common knowledge' about Lacanian theory as well as his own work.
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− | As a form of self-interrogation is the elementary procedure of all his
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− | books, this interview represents Žižek in his essence or, as he might put
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− | it (in Hegelese), Žižek in the mode of 'in-itself'.
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