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
1 - Lacan’s turn to Freud
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
Since we are talking about Lacan, therefore about psychoanalysis, I will begin with a personal reminiscence, almost a confession. It could borrow its title from Milan Kundera's novel The Joke, for it all started with a silly practical joke. In the fall of 1968, when I was a new student at the Ecole normale supérieure, I overheard friends preparing one of the idiosyncratic pranks that used to be one of the privileges of that French cathedral of learning. They had espied with some nervous envy how the famous psychoanalyst would be driven to the school's entrance to emerge with a beautiful woman on his arm and make his way to the office of Louis Althusser, who was then the Ecole's administrative secretary. By contrast with the nondescript student style of the school, Lacan was known to draw crowds from the city's select quarters, a medley of colorful intellectuals, writers, artists, feminists, radicals, and psychoanalysts. It was easy to rig the speakers connected with his microphone. A tape consisting of animal squeals and pornographic grunts had been rapidly put together. Now was the moment to see how the master and his audience would react to this insolence; not having had time to finish lunch, still clutching an unfinished yogurt pot, I followed the conspirators. We arrived late (our X-rated tape was to be aired close to the end of the seminar) into a crowded room, in which dozens of tape recorders had been set on the first row of tables in front of a little stage. There Lacan was striding and talking to the forest of microphones; behind him was a blackboard on which was written: “The essence of psychoanalytic theory is a discourse without words.” Clearly, he was begging for our rude interruption! Precisely as I entered the room, Lacan launched into a disquisition about mustard pots, or to be precise, the mustard pot, l'pot d'moutard'. His delivery was irregular, forceful, oracular.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Lacan , pp. 1 - 24Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003