Sollers once wrote that, to him, Claudel was first and foremost the man who wrote, âParadise is around us at this very moment, all its forests attentive like a great orchestra that invisibly adores and implores. The whole invention of the Universe with its notes falling vertiginously one by one into the abyss where the wonders of our dimensions are written.â Â Well, Lacan is, to me, the one who says in this Seminar, âWe are all familiar with hell, it is everyday life.â Â Is that the same thing? No, I don't think so. Here there is no adoration, no invisible orchestra, no vertigo or wonders. Let us begin by the end: Lacan âevacuatedâ from the rue dâUlm along with his audience, not without resistance or an uproar. The episode was in all the papers. What had he done to deserve such a fate? He had spoken not only to psychoanalysts, but also to young people who were still fired up by the events of May 1968, who nevertheless accepted him as a master of discourse at the same time as they dreamt of subverting the university system. What did he tell them? That âRevolutionâ means returning to the same place. That knowledge now imposes its law on power and has become uncontrollable. That thought is censorship itself. He spoke to them about Marx, but also about Pascal's wagerâwhich became in his hands a new version of the master/slave dialecticânot to mention the foundations of set theory. He moved on to a discussion of perversion, and models of hysteria and obsession. All of that is connected, scintillates, and captivates. Â Between the lines, the dialogue between Lacan and himself continues regarding the subject of jouissance and the relationship between jouissance and speech and language.
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Figures Translatorâs Note INTRODUCTION I. From Surplus Value to Surplus Jouissance The Inconsistency of the Other II. The Knowledge Market and Truth (on) Strike III. Topology of the Other IV. Facts and What is Said V. âI Am What I Isâ VI. Toward a Practice of Logic in Psychoanalysis On Pascalâs Wager VII. Introduction to Pascalâs Wager VIII. The One and Little a IX. From Fibonacci to Pascal X. The Three Matrices XI. Truthâs Retardation and the Administration of Knowledge Jouissance: Its Field XII. âThe Freud Eventâ XIII. On Jouissance Posited as an Absolute XIV. The Two Sides of Sublimation XV. High Fever XVI. Structures of Perversion Jouissance: Its Real XVII. Thought (as) Censorship XVIII. Inside Outside XIX. Knowledge and Power XX. Knowledge and Jouissance XXI. Responses to Aporias Jouissance: Its Logic XXII. Paradoxes of Psychoanalytic Action XXIII. How to Generate Surplus Jouissance Logically XXIV. On the One-Extra Evacuation XXV. The Ravishing Ignominy of the Hommelle Appendices Fibonacci as Used by Lacan, by Luc Miller Readerâs Guide, by Jacques-Alain Miller Dossier on the Evacuation Index
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781509510054
Publisert
2023-10-13
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Vendor
Polity Press
Vekt
703 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
160 mm
Dybde
38 mm
AldersnivĂĽ
P, 06
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Product language
Engelsk
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Product format
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Antall sider
400
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