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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... reveal the very joint of nature to culture. If one makes the appropriate transformation, one can extend the formulas of psychoanalysis concerning this joint to certain human sciences that can utilise them. (1996a:14) One should combine ...
... reveals, by the same token, that its true motive force is elided. There is a beyond to this identification' (XI:271–2). Similarly, Lacan's teaching does not offer itself easily to such identifications, and rightly so. A further problem ...
... reveals only a minor part of the 'political' struggles associated with the Lacanian project almost from its very beginning. It is not surprising then that for many people the only relation between Lacan and the political is incarnated ...
... reveal the relevance of Lacan for our consideration of the political. Simply put, the first three chapters of the ... reveals that the politics of utopia— which has for long dominated our political horizon—lead to a set of dangers that ...
... reveal cracks, tears and rents, negation of the facts and misrecognition of the most immediate experience' (III:8). It is clear that the Freudian discovery of the unconscious, of an agency splitting the subject of this whole tradition ...