Posts tagged ‘Jacques Lacan’
199 reviews
by Jorge Varela, Peter Libbey, George Tomlinson, Jussi Palmusaari, Peter Nyers, John Douglas Millar, Allan Stoekl and Onur Acaroglu / RP 199 (Sept/Oct 2016) / Reviews
Alexandre Kojève, The Notion of Authority (A Brief Presentation)
Jacques Lacan, Transference: The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book VIII
Bruce Fink, Lacan on Love: An Exploration of Lacan’s Seminar VIII, Transference
Name of the Father, ‘One’ of the Mother: From Beauvoir to Lacan
With introduction by Penelope Deutscher
by Françoise Collin / RP 178 (Mar/Apr 2013) / Article
To Our Lady of the Pillar in Zaragossa, perched on her column, ‘But there is something more, a puissance beyond the phallus.’
If I take a few aspects of the thought of Jacques Lacan, and investigate their relation to Simone de Beauvoir around one specific point, I have no intention of making him out – …
More than everything
Žižek's Badiouian Hegel
by Peter Osborne / RP 177 (Jan/Feb 2013) / Article
There are philosophical books, minor classics even, which are widely known and referred to, although no one has actually read them page by page… a nice example of interpassivity, where some figure of the Other is supposed to do the reading for us. Slavoj Žižek1
Allow me to be that figure (for now anyway), …
Figures of interpellation in Althusser and Fanon
by Pierre Macherey / RP 173 (May/Jun 2012) / Article
The text that Althusser published in 1970 under the title ‘Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses’, where he puts forward the thesis of the individual’s interpellation as subject, is no doubt one of his most innovative, but it is also particularly disconcerting: its exposition, in exploiting a rhetoric that combines ellipses and brute force, winds up …
Friedrich Adolf Kittler, 1943–2011
‘Switch off all apparatuses’
by Gill Partington / RP 172 (Mar/Apr 2012) / Obituary
It is a mark of how far Kittler’s reputation had spread in the English-speaking world that he had acquired his own cutely alliterative epithet: ‘the Derrida of the digital age’. It was probably an inevitable moniker for a figure who brought his own brand of poststructuralist thinking to bear on media technologies, but …
David Macey, 1949-2011
Biographer of the French intellectual Left
by Neil Belton and Peter Osborne / RP 171 (Jan/Feb 2012) / Obituary
David Macey died from complications of lung cancer on 7 October. He embodied the paradox of being a fine public intellectual while remaining an intenselyprivate person. He was one of the best intellectual historians of his generation and added appreciably to scholarly knowledge, yet did his most significant work as a freelance writer …
‘All human beings are pregnant’
The bisexual imaginary in Plato’s Symposium
by Stella Sandford / RP 150 (Jul/Aug 2008) / Article
Jean Oury
The hospital is ill
by Jean Oury, Mauricio Novello and David Reggio / RP 143 (May/Jun 2007) / Interview
David Reggio Binswanger asserted that man was in the situation of psychiatry if psychiatry was within the situation of man. But it seems that this equation has become corrupted. In its current form, psychiatry has become a very complex and deterministic pursuit. At the same time, a moralism has proliferated that has eclipsed its ethic. …
Mirrors without images
Mimesis and recognition in Lacan and Adorno
by Vladimir Safatle / RP 139 (Sep/Oct 2006) / Article
Vocabulary of European Philosophies, Part 1 (Subject)
Subject
by Peter Osborne, Étienne Balibar, Barbara Cassin and Alain de Libera / RP 138 (Jul/Aug 2006) / Article
Étienne Balibar, Barbara Cassin, Alain de Libera
Introduction by Peter Osborne.
Kostas Axelos
Mondialisation without the world
by Kostas Axelos and Stuart Elden / RP 130 (Mar/Apr 2005) / Interview
Family values
Butler, Lacan and the rise of Antigone
by Cecilia Sjoholm / RP 111 (Jan/Feb 2002) / Article
It’s the political economy, stupid!
On Zizek’s Marxism
by Sean Homer / RP 108 (Jul/Aug 2001) / Article
The sword and the bridge
The anatomical and the political in conceptions of sexual difference
by Monique Schneider / RP 106 (Mar/Apr 2001) / Article
Psychoanalysis and politics
Juliet Mitchell then and now
by Lynne Segal / RP 103 (Sep/Oct 2000) / Article
Jean Laplanche
The other within - Rethinking psychoanalysis
by Jean Laplanche, Peter Osborne and John Fletcher / RP 102 (Jul/Aug 2000) / Interview
Jean Laplanche is the most original and philosophically informed psychoanalytic theorist of his day. Setting out from a critical reconstruction of Freudʼs terminology, he has developed a systematic rethinking of psychoanalytic metapsychology under the heading of a ʻgeneral theory of seductionʼ. Still best known in Britain for his early joint work with Pontalis – ʻFantasy …
Demanding approval
On the ethics of Alain Badiou
by Simon Critchley / RP 100 (Mar/Apr 2000) / Article
The singular and the specific
Recent French philosophy
by Peter Hallward / RP 099 (Jan/Feb 2000) / Article
199 reviews
by Jorge Varela, Peter Libbey, George Tomlinson, Jussi Palmusaari, Peter Nyers, John Douglas Millar, Allan Stoekl and Onur Acaroglu / RP 199 (Sept/Oct 2016) / ReviewsAlexandre Kojève, The Notion of Authority (A Brief Presentation)
Jacques Lacan, Transference: The Seminar of Jacques Lacan, Book VIII
Bruce Fink, Lacan on Love: An Exploration of Lacan’s Seminar VIII, Transference
Name of the Father, ‘One’ of the Mother: From Beauvoir to Lacan
With introduction by Penelope Deutscherby Françoise Collin / RP 178 (Mar/Apr 2013) / Article
To Our Lady of the Pillar in Zaragossa, perched on her column, ‘But there is something more, a puissance beyond the phallus.’
If I take a few aspects of the thought of Jacques Lacan, and investigate their relation to Simone de Beauvoir around one specific point, I have no intention of making him out – …
More than everything
Žižek's Badiouian Hegelby Peter Osborne / RP 177 (Jan/Feb 2013) / Article
There are philosophical books, minor classics even, which are widely known and referred to, although no one has actually read them page by page… a nice example of interpassivity, where some figure of the Other is supposed to do the reading for us. Slavoj Žižek1
Allow me to be that figure (for now anyway), …
Figures of interpellation in Althusser and Fanon
by Pierre Macherey / RP 173 (May/Jun 2012) / ArticleThe text that Althusser published in 1970 under the title ‘Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses’, where he puts forward the thesis of the individual’s interpellation as subject, is no doubt one of his most innovative, but it is also particularly disconcerting: its exposition, in exploiting a rhetoric that combines ellipses and brute force, winds up …
Friedrich Adolf Kittler, 1943–2011
‘Switch off all apparatuses’by Gill Partington / RP 172 (Mar/Apr 2012) / Obituary
It is a mark of how far Kittler’s reputation had spread in the English-speaking world that he had acquired his own cutely alliterative epithet: ‘the Derrida of the digital age’. It was probably an inevitable moniker for a figure who brought his own brand of poststructuralist thinking to bear on media technologies, but …
David Macey, 1949-2011
Biographer of the French intellectual Leftby Neil Belton and Peter Osborne / RP 171 (Jan/Feb 2012) / Obituary
David Macey died from complications of lung cancer on 7 October. He embodied the paradox of being a fine public intellectual while remaining an intenselyprivate person. He was one of the best intellectual historians of his generation and added appreciably to scholarly knowledge, yet did his most significant work as a freelance writer …
‘All human beings are pregnant’
The bisexual imaginary in Plato’s Symposiumby Stella Sandford / RP 150 (Jul/Aug 2008) / Article
Jean Oury
The hospital is illby Jean Oury, Mauricio Novello and David Reggio / RP 143 (May/Jun 2007) / Interview
David Reggio Binswanger asserted that man was in the situation of psychiatry if psychiatry was within the situation of man. But it seems that this equation has become corrupted. In its current form, psychiatry has become a very complex and deterministic pursuit. At the same time, a moralism has proliferated that has eclipsed its ethic. …
Mirrors without images
Mimesis and recognition in Lacan and Adornoby Vladimir Safatle / RP 139 (Sep/Oct 2006) / Article
Vocabulary of European Philosophies, Part 1 (Subject)
Subjectby Peter Osborne, Étienne Balibar, Barbara Cassin and Alain de Libera / RP 138 (Jul/Aug 2006) / Article
Étienne Balibar, Barbara Cassin, Alain de Libera
Introduction by Peter Osborne.
Kostas Axelos
Mondialisation without the worldby Kostas Axelos and Stuart Elden / RP 130 (Mar/Apr 2005) / Interview
Family values
Butler, Lacan and the rise of Antigoneby Cecilia Sjoholm / RP 111 (Jan/Feb 2002) / Article
It’s the political economy, stupid!
On Zizek’s Marxismby Sean Homer / RP 108 (Jul/Aug 2001) / Article
The sword and the bridge
The anatomical and the political in conceptions of sexual differenceby Monique Schneider / RP 106 (Mar/Apr 2001) / Article
Psychoanalysis and politics
Juliet Mitchell then and nowby Lynne Segal / RP 103 (Sep/Oct 2000) / Article
Jean Laplanche
The other within - Rethinking psychoanalysisby Jean Laplanche, Peter Osborne and John Fletcher / RP 102 (Jul/Aug 2000) / Interview
Jean Laplanche is the most original and philosophically informed psychoanalytic theorist of his day. Setting out from a critical reconstruction of Freudʼs terminology, he has developed a systematic rethinking of psychoanalytic metapsychology under the heading of a ʻgeneral theory of seductionʼ. Still best known in Britain for his early joint work with Pontalis – ʻFantasy …
Demanding approval
On the ethics of Alain Badiouby Simon Critchley / RP 100 (Mar/Apr 2000) / Article
The singular and the specific
Recent French philosophyby Peter Hallward / RP 099 (Jan/Feb 2000) / Article