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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... language, 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 ...
... Language and Speech in Psychoanalysis (1953). The Freudian Thing (1955). The Agency of the Letter in the Unconscious or Reason since Freud (1957). On a Question Preliminary to any Possible Treatment of Psychosis (1957–8). The Direction ...
... languages and institutions, literature and art, that is to say, of the social world, as a necessary prerequisite for the understanding of the analytic experience itself: 'he derived his inspiration, his ways of thinking and his ...
... Languages of Criticism and the Sciences of Man' organised at the Johns Hopkins University. In 1969 a Lacanian department of Psychoanalysis was founded at the new and controversial Université de Paris VIII at Vincennes (later to be ...
... language from being isolated and foreclosed', and thus to keep poststructuralism alive and kicking (Weber, 1991:xii). What seems to be the most interesting idea behind the poststructuralist appropriation of Lacan is that Lacanian theory ...