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Lacanian coordinates from the logic of the signifier to the paradoxes of guilt and desire / Bogdan Wolf.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: London : Karnac, (c)2015.Description: 1 online resource (ix, 197 pages :) illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781782202806
  • 9781782414049
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • BF173 .L333 2015
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
CONTENTS -- ABOUT THE AUTHOR -- CHAPTER ONE The debris and the new discoveries -- CHAPTER TWO New coordinates of psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER THREE Of the truths and lies of logos: Lacan meets Heidegger -- CHAPTER FOUR The signifier, the letter, the voice, and the subject of certainty -- CHAPTER FIVE Two sides of repetition -- CHAPTER SIX The drive and its satisfactions -- CHAPTER SEVEN Superego and the logic of guilt -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Subject: Psychoanalysis is an experience of truths and lies in language. It is also a discourse, and a praxis. Lacanian Coordinates takes the reader from the beginning of Lacan's teaching, from the logic of the signifier and the Lacanian subject, to the drive and object a, qua object a, the paradoxes of guilt, and finally to the desire of the Other, love, and femininity - the themes explored and developed in the second volume of Lacanian Coordinates (2015). Volume One explores the points of Lacanian orientation that lead us to the particularity of the subject, and considers whether we find them not solely in the discourse of the universal, to which religion, science and philosophy testify, but also in the analytic experience itself. Psychoanalysis creates conditions for an encounter with an analyst and with words forgotten, neglected, underestimated, yet also bursting with meaning and surprises. Each chapter contributes to this subjective realisation, taking as reference the clinic, the voice of an analysand, and everyday discourse. An ethics that emerges from this experience is not of the superego but of a speaking being faced with the non-existence of an all-knowing and all-powerful Other.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction BF173 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available on1055395057

Includes bibliographies and index.

COVER -- CONTENTS -- ABOUT THE AUTHOR -- CHAPTER ONE The debris and the new discoveries -- CHAPTER TWO New coordinates of psychoanalysis -- CHAPTER THREE Of the truths and lies of logos: Lacan meets Heidegger -- CHAPTER FOUR The signifier, the letter, the voice, and the subject of certainty -- CHAPTER FIVE Two sides of repetition -- CHAPTER SIX The drive and its satisfactions -- CHAPTER SEVEN Superego and the logic of guilt -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.

Psychoanalysis is an experience of truths and lies in language. It is also a discourse, and a praxis. Lacanian Coordinates takes the reader from the beginning of Lacan's teaching, from the logic of the signifier and the Lacanian subject, to the drive and object a, qua object a, the paradoxes of guilt, and finally to the desire of the Other, love, and femininity - the themes explored and developed in the second volume of Lacanian Coordinates (2015). Volume One explores the points of Lacanian orientation that lead us to the particularity of the subject, and considers whether we find them not solely in the discourse of the universal, to which religion, science and philosophy testify, but also in the analytic experience itself. Psychoanalysis creates conditions for an encounter with an analyst and with words forgotten, neglected, underestimated, yet also bursting with meaning and surprises. Each chapter contributes to this subjective realisation, taking as reference the clinic, the voice of an analysand, and everyday discourse. An ethics that emerges from this experience is not of the superego but of a speaking being faced with the non-existence of an all-knowing and all-powerful Other.

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