Tag: Sigmund Freud
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Beckett, Lacan, and the Gaze
The book advances the claim that Beckett’s visual universe can be described neither through a general theory of “modernist perception” nor through a simple psychoanalytic allegory of seeing, but only by reconstructing the specific way in which the gaze functions as an impersonal, structuring dimension where subject and world fail to meet. In forming a…
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Beckett, Lacan, and the Voice
Brown’s Beckett, Lacan and the Voice stakes its claim on a very precise terrain: it proposes that Beckett’s entire œuvre can be re-read if one takes seriously the Lacanian thesis that the voice is a specific psychoanalytic object—neither pure sound nor mere vehicle of meaning, but the residue of language that both grounds and unravels…
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Introduction to the Reading of Lacan: The Unconscious Structured Like a Language
Introduction to the Reading of Lacan: The Unconscious Structured Like a Language stakes its claim by demonstrating, with didactic patience and analytic precision, how Lacan’s structural re-founding of psychoanalysis can be reconstructed from within the field that grounds it: the speaking subject’s formations of the unconscious as they are anchored in language and staged in…
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Lacan and Other Heresies: Lacanian Pscyhoanalytical Writings
The volume’s distinctive contribution lies in its rigorous effort to reinscribe Lacanian psychoanalysis within a living practice of collective invention, rather than a doctrine of settled theses. Framed by the Freudian School of Melbourne’s long experiment with institutional forms proper to psychoanalysis and catalyzed by the Melbourne seminars of the Belgian analyst Christian Fierens, the…
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Lacanian Theory of Discourse: Subject, Structure, and Society
The volume stakes a precise claim: by reconstructing Lacan’s concept of discourse across clinical, social, and cultural registers, it offers a model in which language and what exceeds language are locked in a structured reciprocity—so that subjects are formed in discourse and yet sustain modalities of resistance through it. The distinctive contribution lies in formalizing…
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‘The Psychology of Love’ by Sigmund Freud
The Psychology of Love gathers, in a single, carefully sequenced volume, Freud’s principal inquiries into how erotic life is constituted by fantasy, conflict, and the vicissitudes of development. Its scholarly stake lies in showing—with clinical and metapsychological precision—that human sexuality is always already symbolically mediated, that desire is organized by scenes and substitutions rather than…
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The Revised Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud
The Revised Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud is a scholarly instrument designed to recalibrate access to Freud’s corpus by bringing the textual surface, the editorial scaffolding, and the translation choices into a single evidential field. Its distinctive contribution is to render visible, and therefore testable, the minute places where Freud’s…
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The Enigma of Woman: Woman in Freud’s Writings
Sarah Kofman’s The Enigma of Woman: Woman in Freud’s Writings is a disciplined reconstruction and a deliberately disconcerting defamiliarization of Freud’s scattered and chronologically asymmetrical reflections on “femininity.” It proceeds by accepting Freud’s declared interest in observation, method, and conceptual economy while patiently exposing the inner duplicities of those same appeals whenever they function as…
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Mourning Freud
Madelon Sprengnether’s Mourning Freud is a penetrating exposition of the dynamics between Freud’s personal experiences of mourning and the evolution of psychoanalytic theory throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. This richly textured work unravels the psychological, biographical, and cultural dimensions of Freud’s life, situating his struggles with loss at the nexus of his theoretical framework,…
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‘Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis’ by Sigmund Freud
Few works in the field of psychology have endured with as much intellectual consequence, as much capacity to provoke thought and reflection, and as much historical gravitas as Sigmund Freud’s Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis. The present edition, translated by G. Stanley Hall, is not merely a straightforward rendering of Freud’s original German text, but as…
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Lacan and Language: A Reader’s Guide to Écrits
This book stands as an extraordinarily rigorous and lucidly subtle instrument designed to guide any serious reader through the labyrinthine terrain that constitutes Jacques Lacan’s Écrits. Its authors, John P. Muller and William J. Richardson, address themselves to a daunting intellectual challenge: to bring into focus a complex variety of thought in which Jacques Lacan’s…