Interpreting Lacan
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Interpreting Lacan
(Psychiatry and the humanities / editor, Joseph H. Smith, v. 6)
Yale University Press, c1983
- : pbk
Available at 15 libraries
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Note
"Published under the auspices of the Forum on Psychiatry and the Humanities, the Washington School of Psychiatry"--P. preceding t.p
Includes bibliographies and index
Contents of Works
- Introduction / by William Kerrigan
- Analysis : the image and the word / by Stanley A. Leavy
- Language, psychosis, and the subject in Lacan / by John P. Muller
- Within the microcosm of "the talking cure" / by Julia Kristeva
- Philosophy and psychoanalytic theory. Lacan and the subject of psychoanalysis / by William J. Richardson
- Hegel, Heidegger, Lacan / by Edward S. Casey and J. Melvin Woody
- Hegel as Lacan's source for necessity in psychoanalytic theory / by Wilfried Ver Eecke
- Psychoanalysis and the being-question / by William J. Richardson
- The logic of Lacan's objet a and Freudian theory / by André Green
- From Freud's "other scene" to Lacan's "other" / by Antoine Vergote
- Lacan in use. "The universe makes an indifferent parent" / by Christine van Boheemen-Saaf
- Epilogue / by Joseph H. Smith
Description and Table of Contents
Description
To assimilate a writer as allusive as Lacan is to enter into an entire culture. However firm their grounding in Freud, readers of Lacan must learn to rethink psychoanalysis with a speculative breadth sometimes exceeding that of Freud himself. This book, designed to clarify the works of a controversial and influential figure, is the first collection of critical essays to appear in English since Lacan's own writings began to be widely distributed in translation.
Drawing on psychology, philosophy, literary criticism, and clinical and theoretical psychiatry, this volume explores the full range of Lacan's thought. An introduction by Kerrigan is followed by three papers by Stanley Laeavy, John Muller, and Julia Kristeva centered on the application of Lacan to the work of therapy. The second section clarifies Lacan's Hegelian and Heideggerian roots, with contributions by William Richardson, Edward Casey and J. Melvin Woody, Wilfried Ver Eecke, Andre Green, and Antoine Vergote. The final article is a Lacanian interpretation of Bleak Houseby Christine van Boheemen-Saaf indicating the potential of this approach for applied psychoanalysis.
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