Jacques Lacan
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- "In my view, only those who have had the courage to work through Lacan's anti-philosophy without faltering deserve to be called 'contemporary philosophers'." --Alain Badiou
Jacques-Marie-Émile Lacan (April 13, 1901 – September 9, 1981) was a French psychoanalyst, psychiatrist, and doctor. Lacan’s ‘return to the meaning of Freud’ profoundly changed the institutional face of the psychoanalytic movement internationally. The Seminars of Jacques Lacan, which started in 1953 and lasted until his death in 1980, were one of the formative environments of the currency of philosophical ideas that dominated French letters in the 1960s and '70s, and which has come to be known in the Anglophone world as post-structuralism, though it would be a mischaracterization to label Lacan as only a post-structuralist. This entailed a renewed concentration upon the Freudian concepts of the unconscious, the castration complex, the ego conceptualised as a mosaic of identifications, and the centrality of language to any psychoanalytic work. His work has a strong interdisciplinary focus, drawing particularly on linguistics, philosophy, and mathematics, and he has become an important figure in many fields beyond psychoanalysis, particularly within critical theory, and can be regarded as an important figure of twentieth-century French philosophy.
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Personal life
He was married to the ex-wife of Georges Bataille, Sylvia Maklès.
Fourteenth Congress of the International Psychoanalytic Association
At Marienbad, In August 1936, at the Fourteenth Congress of the International Psychoanalytic Association directed by Ernest Jones, Lacan delivers his speech on the mirror stage.
Lacanian concepts
- Name of the Father
- Oedipal drama and the Oedipal signification
- Objet Petit a
- The Seminars of Jacques Lacan
- Signifier/ Signified
- The Letter
- Foreclusion - Foreclosure
- Jouissance
- Lack (manque)
- Mirror stage
- The Phallus
- Das Ding
- The gaze
- The four discourses
- The graph of desire
- Paranoiac knowledge
- Sinthome
- Lacan's Topology
- The Three Orders
Texts
- Motifs du crime paranoïaque - Le crime des sœurs Papin (1933)
- Au-delà du principe de réalité (1936)
- Les complexes familiaux dans la formation de l'individu (1938)
- Propos sur la causalité psychique (1946)
- L'agressivité en psychanalyse (1948)
- Le stade du miroir comme formateur de la fonction du Je (1949)
- Intervention sur le transfert (1951)
- Discours de Rome (1953)
- Fonction et champs de la parole et du langage en psychanalyse (1953)
- Les écrits techniques de Freud (S I) (1953–1954)
- Le Moi dans la théorie de Freud et dans la technique de la psychanalyse (S II) (1954–1955)
- Les psychoses (S III) (1955–1956)
- La relation d'objet (S IV) (1956–1957)
- Les formations de l'inconscient (S V) (1957–1958)
- Le désir et son interprétation (S VI) (1958–1959)
- L'éthique de la psychanalyse (S VII) (1959–1960)
- Le transfert (S VIII) (1960–1961)
- L'identification (S IX) (1961–1962)
- L'angoisse (S X) (1962–1963)
- Les quatre concepts fondamentaux de la psychanalyse (S XI) (1964)
- Problèmes cruciaux pour la psychanalyse (S XII) (1964–1965)
- L'objet de la psychanalyse (S XIII) (1965–1966)
- La logique du fantasme (S XIV) (1966–1967)
- L'acte psychanalytique (S XV) (1967–1968)
- D'un Autre à l'autre (S XVI) (1968–1969)
- L'envers de la psychanalyse (S XVII) (1969–1970)
- D'un discours qui ne serait pas du semblant (S XVIII) (1970–1971)
- Ou pire… (S XIX) (1971–1972)
- Encore (S XX) (1972–1973)
- Les non dupes errent (S XXI) (1973–1974)
- La troisième (1974)
- RSI (S XXII) (1974–1975)
- Le sinthome (S XXIII) (1975–1976)
- L'insu que sait de l'une bévue s'aile à mourre (S XXIV) (1976–1977)
- Le moment de conclure (S XXV) (1977–1978)
- La topologie et le temps (S XXVI) (1978–1979)
- Dissolution (S XXVII) (1980)