Subjectivity and Otherness A Philosophical Reading of Lacan
“suffered” or been holed by the signifier; hence the Thing isa transcendent“inacces- sible”^117 hole. This is precisely what dif ...
is initially located; ( 2 ) the Thing (the mother) as a transcendent lack which is the primordial object as always-already lostf ...
representation of objects in everyday reality is concomitant with the emergence of an unconscious Real-of-the-Symbolic (the obje ...
( 4 ) An accurate topological understanding of the precise coordinates of the rela- tionship between S (the subject barred by th ...
be channeled in a socially acceptable way, unlike Freud, he also thinks that these objects are not acceptable just because they ...
“system” is marked by what Derrida calls the “ideality of the signifier”?^150 From what we have seen so far, it is certainly dif ...
language (parlêtre);for the parlêtrethere is nothing beyond the parlêtre.Hence the cal- culation of the duration or length of th ...
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chapter 5 The Subject of the Fantasy... and Beyond ...
An Overview 5 1 The Subject of the Fantasy and the Function of the Death Drive: the Death Drive: An Overview The reformulation o ...
subject of the fantasy as the subject of the Real. In “Subversion of the Subject” (196 0)—which is, significantly, the first art ...
whole Real, the mythical primordial zero which is retroactively counted as One— which is then to say that the object asimultaneo ...
whether to assign it to the Symbolic, as he did especially in the early to mid-195 0s, or to the Real, a more common choice in h ...
It should now be clear how Lacan’s recourse to the “creationism” of the signifier solves many of the impasses in Freud’s discuss ...
time, including it. As Laplanche and Pontalis observe, the only way out of this im- passe for Freud was to implicitly presuppose ...
As we shall see in Section 5. 5 , the Real of jouissance—that of the object a—is indeed always a Real-of-the-Symbolic. Beginning ...
far as suggesting that, according to Lacan, death “in reality” is, following a Leib- nizian legacy, a mere “diminishing” of the ...
dividual level, and which accounts for the extraordinary importance he attaches to the mythical examples of symbolic death, is a ...
memory” can be memorized only thanks to the screen provided by the “screen memory.” Initially, there is only the purely chaotic ...
dox of “pure” desire from different—albeit convergent—angles should always re- main visible in the background. 5 2 The Subject o ...
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