61:
1050:(as the naming of one's Real) advocated in Lacan's last works as the aim of psychoanalysis," will in time prove as fruitful as that of the symbolic order perhaps remains to be seen. Part of Lacan's enduring legacy will surely however remain bound up with the triumphal exploration of the symbolic order that was the Rome Report: "Symbols in fact envelop the life of man in a network so total that they join together the shape of his destiny."
650:
1368:, the upholstery button or quilting point. This sews the subject into the symbolic order and thus redoubles him as both an imaginary individual and a subject of legal responsibility and social expectation: 'the notion of father gives the most palpable element in experience of what I've called the quilting point between the signifier and the signified' (SII: 268).
964:'s order of culture:" a language-mediated order of culture. Therefore, "Man speaks…but it is because the symbol has made him man" which "superimposes the kingdom of culture on that of a nature."Accepting that "language is the basic social institution in the sense that all others presuppose language," Lacan found in
845:
Early on, Lacan considered his attempt "to distinguish between those elementary registers whose grounding I later put forward in these terms: the symbolic, the imaginary, and the real" to be "a distinction never previously made in psychoanalysis", because Freud had not encountered semiotic ideas, but
1025:
With the increasing use of
Lacanian theory in psychoanalysis in the Sixties, the Symbolic was seen more as an inseparable quality of the human condition, rather than as a register for a therapeutic cure-all. Lacan's critical attention began to shift instead to the concept of the Real, seen as "that
1009:—"the big other, that is, the other of language, the Names-of-the-Father, signifiers or words are public, communal property." But though it is an essentially linguistic dimension, Lacan does not simply equate the symbolic with language, since the latter is involved also in the Imaginary and
949:.…it set out from their formative function in the subject." Therefore "the notion of the 'symbolic came to the forefront in the Rome Report …henceforth it is the symbolic, not the imaginary, that is seen to be the determining order of the subject."
989:—in so far as we continue to recognise it as covering the whole field of our experience with its signification"—as the point whereby the weight of social reality was mediated to the developing child by the (symbolic) father: "It is in the
1033:
as 'Freud's dream'", despite his own earlier warning of the dangers if "one wishes to ignore the symbolic articulation that Freud discovered at the same time as the unconscious…his methodical reference to the
Oedipus complex."
984:
the anthropological premise that "man is indeed an 'animal symbolicum'", and that "the self-illumination of society through symbols is an essential part of social reality," Lacan made the leap to seeing "the
905:
of signifiers with a "paternal metaphor", a master signifier that "double stitches" the meaning of the
Symbolic Order over the Imaginary Order by establishing the Law, a prohibition of
580:
980:
of the
Imaginary: "It is the task of symbolism to forbid imaginary capture supremacy of the symbolic over the imaginary supremacy of the symbolic over the real." Accepting through
968:'s linguistic division of the verbal sign between signifier and signified a new key to the Freudian understanding that "his therapeutic method was 'a talking cure.'"
1026:
over which the symbolic stumbles that which is lacking in the symbolic order, the ineliminable residue of all articulation the umbilical cord of the symbolic."
1275:
901:(no-no) to contextualize Freudian incest prohibition into a figurative, linguistic framework; the name-of-the-father (no-of-the-father) signifier quilts the
1002:
describes the relation to the mother as a mirrored relationship the third term, the father"—to be broken up and opened to the wider symbolic order.
995:
that we must recognize the support of the symbolic function which, from the dawn of history, has identified his person with the figure of the law."
446:
81:
926:,' which Žižek describes as the ultimately fake 'quasi-transcendental master signifier that guarantees the consistency of the big Other.'
998:
The imaginary now came to be seen increasingly as belonging to the earlier, closed realm of the dual relationship of mother and child—"
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Lacan's concept of the symbolic "owes much to a key event in the rise of structuralism…the publication of
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For a decade or so after the Rome Report, Lacan found in the concept of the
Symbolic an answer to the
788:. A formative moment in the development of the Symbolic in a subject is the Other giving rise to the
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and thus belongs to the
Symbolic. It is also the realm of the Law that regulates desire in the
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Lacan describes the name-of-the-father by means of an analogy from the realm of fabrics:
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The name-of-the-father is a "binary signifier" while the phallus is a "unary signifier".
141:
1432:
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1355:
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Thurston, Luke, "Ineluctable
Nodalities: On the Borromean Knot", in: Dany Nobus (ed.),
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Hurst, Andrea (2008). "3 Derrida: Différance and the 'Plural Logic of the Aporia'".
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Jacques Lacan and the Other Side of
Psychoanalysis: Reflections on Seminar XVII
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encountered phenomena in case studies that warranted a semiotic understanding.
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Lewis, Michael (2008). "1 Lacan: The name-of-the-father and the phallus".
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Lewis, Michael (2008). "1 Lacan: The name-of-the-father and the phallus".
1253:
1242:
Lewis, Michael (2008). "1 Lacan: The name-of-the-father and the phallus".
1221:. Translated by Beck Simiu, Devra. New York University Press. p. 55.
1029:
By the turn of the decade (1968–71), "Lacan gradually came to dismiss the
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1219:
Jacques Lacan's Return to Freud: The Real, the
Symbolic and the Imaginary
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Derrida Vis-Ă -vis Lacan: Interweaving
Deconstruction and Psychoanalysis
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in 1949.… In many ways, the symbolic is for Lacan an equivalent to
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838:'s unity of signifier and signified, "is that which represents a
1500:
Sigmund Freud and Joseph Breuer, as quoted in Macey 1994: xxvii.
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921:
920:
Lacan's term for such elected transcendental constants is the '
126:
1509:
Miller, Jacques-Alain. 1997. "Commentary" in J. Lacan. 1997.
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818:
had failed to tackle in theory, develops from an unstable
705:) is the order in the unconscious that gives rise to
1013:. The symbolic dimension of language is that of the
941:
Lacan's early work was centred on an exploration of
1527:The Problem of Social Reality: Collected Papers I
1274:: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of September 2024 (
762:that you must situate the unconscious' (SXI: 26).
1623:
1473:The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis
1457:The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis
1293:The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis
1020:
1557:, edited by J. Mitchell and J. Rose. New York.
1005:Lacan's shorthand for that wider world was the
830:). "The signifier", which in Lacan's theory is
447:The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis
1455:. 1994. "Translator' Note" in J. Lacan. 1994.
1386:. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 16–79.
1344:. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 16–79.
1248:. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 16–79.
1421:. Fordham University Press. pp. 72–112.
674:
971:
1037:Whether his development of the concept of
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667:
589:International Psychoanalytical Association
864:For broader coverage of this topic, see
25:For broader coverage of this topic, see
1579:Clemens, J., and R. Grigg, eds., 2006.
1471:. 1994. "Introduction." Pp. i–xxvii in
1205:Key Concepts of Lacanian Psychoanalysis
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713:between two subjects; an example is
583:Psychoanalytic Training and Research
373:The Psychopathology of Everyday Life
1553:. 1982. "Seminar III." Pp. 57–8 in
1043:, or "the 'identification with the
717:'s idea of desire as the desire of
594:World Association of Psychoanalysis
13:
1489:The Construction of Social Reality
1383:Derrida and Lacan: Another Writing
1341:Derrida and Lacan: Another Writing
1245:Derrida and Lacan: Another Writing
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82:Psychosocial development (Erikson)
14:
1663:
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599:List of schools of psychoanalysis
958:Elementary Structures of Kinship
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575:British Psychoanalytical Society
427:Civilization and Its Discontents
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806:. However, when it becomes an
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725:of Lacan, it is linked by the
581:Columbia University Center for
570:British Psychoanalytic Council
467:The Sublime Object of Ideology
437:The Mass Psychology of Fascism
1:
1617:The Seminars of Jacques Lacan
1021:Changes in the idea's meaning
758:'It is in the dimension of a
407:Beyond the Pleasure Principle
397:Psychology of the Unconscious
834:the signified as opposed to
363:The Interpretation of Dreams
7:
1612:Chronology of Jacques Lacan
1531:Martinus Nijhoff Publishers
1207:, Other Press, pp. 144-145.
1175:Spectacle (critical theory)
1130:Interpellation (philosophy)
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10:
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1632:Psychoanalytic terminology
1597:Subjectivity and Otherness
1150:Phenomenology (philosophy)
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384:Three Essays on the Theory
24:
18:
1217:Julien, Philippe (1994).
562:Boston Graduate School of
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1091:Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe
972:Predominance of the idea
842:for another signifier."
784:, and is determinant of
77:Psychosexual development
1652:Philosophy of sexuality
1256:(inactive 2024-09-10).
772:In Lacan's theory, the
753:Signified and signifier
1513:. London. p. 327, 332.
1475:, by J. Lacan. London.
1262:10.3366/j.ctt1r2cj3.10
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909:demand by supplanting
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1570:. London. p. 73, 160.
1402:10.3366/j.ctt1r2cj3.7
1360:10.3366/j.ctt1r2cj3.7
1254:10.3366/j.ctt1r2cj3.7
966:Ferdinand de Saussure
918:
885:Stitch (textile arts)
756:
723:psychoanalytic theory
655:Psychology portal
634:Psychoanalytic theory
1566:Hill, Philip. 1997.
1299:London. p. 126, 246.
978:neurotic problematic
889:Lacan uses a French
776:is the discourse of
619:Child psychoanalysis
107:Id, ego and superego
45:a series of articles
1568:Lacan for Beginners
1511:Écrits: A Selection
1366:le point de capiton
1326:Écrits: A Selection
954:Claude LĂ©vi-Strauss
791:objet petit (a)utre
142:Countertransference
1642:Post-structuralism
1555:Feminine Sexuality
1170:Sociology of space
992:name of the Father
866:Floating signifier
860:Name of the Father
484:Schools of thought
417:The Ego and the Id
1599:. London. p. 188.
1393:978-0-7486-3603-7
1351:978-0-7486-3603-7
1165:Social philosophy
874:Nomos (sociology)
711:intersubjectivity
691:
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175:Important figures
102:Psychic apparatus
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1583:. London. p. 51.
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1071:Georges Bataille
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749:Unconscious mind
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526:Object relations
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808:empty signifier
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1297:A. Sheridan.
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1135:Logocentrism
1066:Alain Badiou
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227:Freud (Anna)
137:Transference
122:Introjection
112:Ego defenses
92:Preconscious
1160:Semiosphere
897:(name) vs.
881:Prohibition
828:foreclosure
774:unconscious
87:Unconscious
21:Lacanianism
1626:Categories
1140:Logosphere
1040:jouissance
879:See also:
536:Relational
147:Resistance
117:Projection
1529:. Hague:
1459:. London.
1328:. London.
1270:cite book
1185:Worldview
1110:Amor fati
1015:signifier
907:imaginary
824:signified
820:metonymic
812:psychosis
778:the Other
760:synchrony
719:the Other
337:Winnicott
317:Spielrein
297:Laplanche
217:Fairbairn
157:Dreamwork
1595:. 2007.
1525:. 1973.
1487:. 1995.
1324:. 1997.
1291:. 1994.
1103:See also
1046:sinthome
1011:the Real
929:—
913:desire.
911:symbolic
870:Antinomy
836:Saussure
814:, which
765:—
743:Overview
737:the Real
728:sinthome
695:Symbolic
612:See also
554:Training
531:Reichian
506:Lacanian
491:Adlerian
332:Sullivan
327:Strachey
282:Kristeva
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252:Irigaray
242:Guattari
222:Ferenczi
207:Chodorow
162:Cathexis
70:Concepts
43:Part of
1031:Oedipus
937:History
903:lattice
840:subject
826:(i.e.,
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521:Marxist
501:Jungian
212:Erikson
182:Abraham
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471:(1989)
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401:(1912)
390:(1905)
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367:(1899)
322:Stekel
302:Mahler
247:Horney
202:Breuer
192:Balint
152:Denial
127:Libido
33:, and
1433:JSTOR
1398:JSTOR
1356:JSTOR
1258:JSTOR
1192:Notes
1007:Other
947:imago
832:above
816:Freud
767:Lacan
342:Žižek
312:Reich
292:Laing
287:Lacan
277:Klein
272:Kohut
262:Jones
237:Fromm
187:Adler
132:Drive
1535:ISBN
1423:ISBN
1388:ISBN
1346:ISBN
1276:link
1223:ISBN
883:and
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697:(or
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267:Jung
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