Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Lacan’s turn to Freud
- 2 The mirror stage: an obliterated archive
- 3 Lacan’s myths
- 4 Lacan’s science of the subject: between linguistics and topology
- 5 From the letter to the matheme: Lacan’s scientific methods
- 6 The paradoxes of the symptom in psychoanalysis
- 7 Desire and jouissance in the teachings of Lacan
- 8 Lacan and philosophy
- 9 Lacan’s Marxism, Marxism’s Lacan (from Žižek to Althusser)
- 10 Ethics and tragedy in Lacan
- 11 A Lacanian approach to the logic of perversion
- 12 What is a Lacanian clinic?
- 13 Beyond the phallus: Lacan and feminism
- 14 Lacan and queer theory
- 15 Lacan’s afterlife: Jacques Lacan meets Andy Warhol
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
8 - Lacan and philosophy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Lacan’s turn to Freud
- 2 The mirror stage: an obliterated archive
- 3 Lacan’s myths
- 4 Lacan’s science of the subject: between linguistics and topology
- 5 From the letter to the matheme: Lacan’s scientific methods
- 6 The paradoxes of the symptom in psychoanalysis
- 7 Desire and jouissance in the teachings of Lacan
- 8 Lacan and philosophy
- 9 Lacan’s Marxism, Marxism’s Lacan (from Žižek to Althusser)
- 10 Ethics and tragedy in Lacan
- 11 A Lacanian approach to the logic of perversion
- 12 What is a Lacanian clinic?
- 13 Beyond the phallus: Lacan and feminism
- 14 Lacan and queer theory
- 15 Lacan’s afterlife: Jacques Lacan meets Andy Warhol
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
Summary
No writer in the history of psychoanalysis has done more to bring Freudian theory into dialogue with the philosophical tradition than Jacques Lacan. His work engages with a dauntingly wide array of thinkers, including not only his near contemporaries (Saussure, Benvéniste, Jakobson, Bataille, Merleau-Ponty, Lévi-Strauss, Piaget, Sartre, Kojève, Hyppolite, Koyré, and Althusser), but also other figures reaching back to the Enlightenment (Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, Marx, Hegel, and Kant) and beyond, from Spinoza, Leibniz, and Descartes, to Pascal, Saint Augustine, Aristotle, Plato, and the pre- Socratics. His references, moreover, are not limited to the familiar landmarks of the post-Structuralist tradition who have so often been used to interpret him (Kojève and Hegel, Saussure and Lévi-Strauss), but include numerous figures from the British tradition (Bertrand Russell, Jeremy Bentham, Isaac Newton, Jonathan Swift, and George Berkeley), as well as from the history of science and mathematics (Cantor, Frege, Poincaré, Bourbaki, Moebius, Huyghens, Copernicus, Kepler, and Euclid). While some of these references are no doubt merely grace notes, introduced to embellish a notoriously labyrinthine and Gongoristic style, it is impossible to ignore the fact that his engagement with a large number of these figures is serious, focused, and sustained over many years.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Lacan , pp. 116 - 152Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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