To speak is never neutral

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Bibliographic Information

To speak is never neutral

Luce Irigaray ; translated by Gail Schwab

Continuum, 2002

  • : hbk
  • : pbk.

Other Title

Parler n'est jamais neutre

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Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: hbk ISBN 9780826459046

Description

To Speak is Never Neutral presents a vital selection of the range of Luce Irigaray's writings, revealing the origin and development of many ideas central to her thought. The earliest essays included here reveal Irigaray's debt to structural linguistics and deconstruction drawn from her initial studies in the language of schizophrenia. The later essays present Irigaray's highly original explorations of psychoanalysis and language.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction. 2. Linguistic and Specular Communication. 3. Negation and Negative Transformations in the Language of Schizophrenics. 4. Towards a Grammar of Enunciation for Hysterics and Obsessives. 5. On Phantasm and the Verb. 6. Linguistic Structures of Kinship and Their Perturbations in Schizophrenia. 7. Sentence Production Among Schizophrenics and Senile Dementia Patients. 8. The Utterance in Analysis. 9. Class Language, Unconscious Language. 10. The Rape of the Letter. 11. Sex as Sign. 12. Idiolect or Other Logic. 13. Does Schizophrenic Discourse Exist? 14. Schizophrenics, Or the Refusal of Schiz. 15. The Setting in Psychoanalysis. 16. The Poverty of Psychoanalysis. 17. The Language of Man. 18. The Limits of Transference. 19. In Science, Is the Subject Sexed?
Volume

: pbk. ISBN 9780826459053

Description

Contributing to our understanding of how scientific language functions., Luce Irigaray aims to dispel notion that scientific language is objective, unveiling the gendered - and, crucially, the prejudicial - dimensions of a range of psychoanalytic discourses. This selection of the range of Luce Irigaray's writings reveals the origin and development of many ideas central to her thought. The earliest essays included here reveal Irigaray's debt to structural linguistics and deconstruction drawn from her initial studies in the language of schizophrenia. The later essays present Irigaray's explorations of psychoanalysis and language.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction. 2. Linguistic and Specular Communication. 3. Negation and Negative Transformations in the Language of Schizophrenics. 4. Towards a Grammar of Enunciation for Hysterics and Obsessives. 5. On Phantasm and the Verb. 6. Linguistic Structures of Kinship and Their Perturbations in Schizophrenia. 7. Sentence Production Among Schizophrenics and Senile Dementia Patients. 8. The Utterance in Analysis. 9. Class Language, Unconscious Language. 10. The Rape of the Letter. 11. Sex as Sign. 12. Idiolect or Other Logic. 13. Does Schizophrenic Discourse Exist? 14. Schizophrenics, Or the Refusal of Schiz. 15. The Setting in Psychoanalysis. 16. The Poverty of Psychoanalysis. 17. The Language of Man. 18. The Limits of Transference. 19. In Science, Is the Subject Sexed?

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