Lacan and the PoliticalRoutledge, 11 sep 2002 - 198 pagina's The work of Jacques Lacan is second only to Freud in its impact on psychoanalysis. Yannis Stavrakakis clearly examines Lacan's challenging views on time, history, language, alterity, desire and sexuality from a political standpoint. It is the first book to provide an overview of the social and political implications of Lacan's work as a whole for students coming to Lacan for the first time. |
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... human experience per se. He highlights Lacan's innovative understanding of the socio-political field and situates his thought within a theoretical terrain comprising deconstruction, discourse theory, the sociology of risk and recent ...
... humanity, alterity, desire, sexuality, gender and culture open up the possibility of thinking the political anew? What are the implications of such thinking for our understanding of and relation to the leading ideologies of the modern ...
... human sciences that can utilise them. (1996a:14) One should combine this approach—the movement from the individual to the social—with the more socio-centric statements included in Lacan's doctoral thesis (1932) and elsewhere—indicating ...
... human experience. Naturally, this tripartite schema is not the only mapping of Lacan's theoretical trajectory possible.8 In any case we have no reason to believe that Lacan's response to all these attempts to spatialise and sediment his ...
... human subject. As FeherGurewich states à propos of social theory: 'Lacan's psychoanalytic approach is founded on premises that are in sharp contrast to the ones which have led to the failure of an alliance between psychoanalysis and ...