Posts tagged ‘Sigmund Freud’
The dream is a fragment
Freud, transdisciplinarity and early German Romanticism
by Stella Sandford / RP 198 (Jul/Aug 2016) / Article, Romantic Transdisciplinarity 2
An appreciation and practice of the fragment is a feature of all European Romanticism, but it was in early German (or ‘Jena’) Romanticism, and most of all in the work of Friedrich Schlegel, that the concept of ‘the fragment’ was philosophically determined. Indeed, the fragment has been called ‘the central philosophical concept of early German …
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 – …
Flickers
by Philip Derbyshire / RP 177 (Jan/Feb 2013) / Review
Bruno Bosteels, Marx and Freud in Latin America: Politics, Psychoanalysis and Religion in Times of Terror, Verso, London and New York, 2012. 326 pp., £19.99 pb., 978 1 84467 755 9.
Bruno Bosteels is probably best known to readers of Radical Philosophy as translator of and commentator on the work of Alain Badiou …
Jean Laplanche, 1924–2012
Forming new knots
by Nicholas Ray / RP 174 (Jul/Aug 2012) / Obituary
Jean Laplanche, one of Europe’s most eminent and original psychoanalytic thinkers, died on 6 May, at the age of 87. His death brings to an end a remarkable intellectual career dedicated to the meticulous analysis and rigorous critical expansion of the Freudian discovery. Laplanche was born on 21 June 1924 to a …
Who was Oscar Masotta?
Psychoanalysis in Argentina
by Philip Derbyshire / RP 158 (Nov/Dec 2009) / Article
As Manuel Vázquez Montalbán’s sardonic detective Pepe Carvalho ruefully observed, in a dictionary of Argentine clichés, psychoanalysis would have a crucial place, along with ‘tango and the disappeared’.1 ‘One’ knows that along with Paris, Buenos Aires is one of the centres of psychoanalytic practice, and one of the leading training centres …
Mirrors without images
Mimesis and recognition in Lacan and Adorno
by Vladimir Safatle / RP 139 (Sep/Oct 2006) / Article
Re-presentation of the repressed: The political revolution of the neo-avant-garde
Dossier: Spheres of action - Art and politics
by Peter Weibel / RP 137 (May/Jun 2006) / Article, Dossier, Spheres of action - Art and politics
Enigma variation
Laplanchean psychoanalysis and the formation of the raced unconscious
by Shannon W. Sullivan / RP 122 (Nov/Dec 2003) / Article
The introduction of the Oedipus Complex and the reinvention of instinct
Freud’s Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality
by Philippe Van Haute / RP 115 (Sep/Oct 2002) / Article
Philippe Van Haute traces the evolution of the relation between ‘normality’ and pathology in Freud’s additions to Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality.
Family values
Butler, Lacan and the rise of Antigone
by Cecilia Sjoholm / RP 111 (Jan/Feb 2002) / 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
History and the process of mourning in Hegel and Freud
by Catherine Malabou / 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 …
Childhood experience and the image of utopia
The broken promise of Adorno’s Proustian sublimations
by Matt F. Connell / RP 099 (Jan/Feb 2000) / Article
Cracking the cultural code
Methodological reflections on Kracauer’s ‘The Mass Ornament’
by Steve Giles / RP 099 (Jan/Feb 2000) / Article
‘Radical evil’ revived
Hitler, Kant, Luther, neo-Lacanianism
by Henry Staten / RP 098 (Nov/Dec 1999) / Article
Critical reproblemization
Foucault and the task of modern philosophy
by Michael Schwartz / RP 091 (Sep/Oct 1998) / Article
It was a matter of analyzing … the problemizations through which being offers itself to be, necessarily thought – and the practices on the basis of which these problemizations are formed.
Michel Foucault, The Use of Pleasure 1
Michel Foucault is well known for having periodically redescribed his previous studies in light of …
The dream is a fragment
Freud, transdisciplinarity and early German Romanticismby Stella Sandford / RP 198 (Jul/Aug 2016) / Article, Romantic Transdisciplinarity 2
An appreciation and practice of the fragment is a feature of all European Romanticism, but it was in early German (or ‘Jena’) Romanticism, and most of all in the work of Friedrich Schlegel, that the concept of ‘the fragment’ was philosophically determined. Indeed, the fragment has been called ‘the central philosophical concept of early German …
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 – …
Flickers
by Philip Derbyshire / RP 177 (Jan/Feb 2013) / ReviewBruno Bosteels, Marx and Freud in Latin America: Politics, Psychoanalysis and Religion in Times of Terror, Verso, London and New York, 2012. 326 pp., £19.99 pb., 978 1 84467 755 9.
Bruno Bosteels is probably best known to readers of Radical Philosophy as translator of and commentator on the work of Alain Badiou …
Jean Laplanche, 1924–2012
Forming new knotsby Nicholas Ray / RP 174 (Jul/Aug 2012) / Obituary
Jean Laplanche, one of Europe’s most eminent and original psychoanalytic thinkers, died on 6 May, at the age of 87. His death brings to an end a remarkable intellectual career dedicated to the meticulous analysis and rigorous critical expansion of the Freudian discovery. Laplanche was born on 21 June 1924 to a …
Who was Oscar Masotta?
Psychoanalysis in Argentinaby Philip Derbyshire / RP 158 (Nov/Dec 2009) / Article
As Manuel Vázquez Montalbán’s sardonic detective Pepe Carvalho ruefully observed, in a dictionary of Argentine clichés, psychoanalysis would have a crucial place, along with ‘tango and the disappeared’.1 ‘One’ knows that along with Paris, Buenos Aires is one of the centres of psychoanalytic practice, and one of the leading training centres …
Mirrors without images
Mimesis and recognition in Lacan and Adornoby Vladimir Safatle / RP 139 (Sep/Oct 2006) / Article
Re-presentation of the repressed: The political revolution of the neo-avant-garde
Dossier: Spheres of action - Art and politicsby Peter Weibel / RP 137 (May/Jun 2006) / Article, Dossier, Spheres of action - Art and politics
Enigma variation
Laplanchean psychoanalysis and the formation of the raced unconsciousby Shannon W. Sullivan / RP 122 (Nov/Dec 2003) / Article
The introduction of the Oedipus Complex and the reinvention of instinct
Freud’s Three Essays on the Theory of Sexualityby Philippe Van Haute / RP 115 (Sep/Oct 2002) / Article
Philippe Van Haute traces the evolution of the relation between ‘normality’ and pathology in Freud’s additions to Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality.
Family values
Butler, Lacan and the rise of Antigoneby Cecilia Sjoholm / RP 111 (Jan/Feb 2002) / Article
The sword and the bridge
The anatomical and the political in conceptions of sexual differenceby Monique Schneider / RP 106 (Mar/Apr 2001) / Article
History and the process of mourning in Hegel and Freud
by Catherine Malabou / RP 106 (Mar/Apr 2001) / ArticlePsychoanalysis 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 …
Childhood experience and the image of utopia
The broken promise of Adorno’s Proustian sublimationsby Matt F. Connell / RP 099 (Jan/Feb 2000) / Article
Cracking the cultural code
Methodological reflections on Kracauer’s ‘The Mass Ornament’by Steve Giles / RP 099 (Jan/Feb 2000) / Article
‘Radical evil’ revived
Hitler, Kant, Luther, neo-Lacanianismby Henry Staten / RP 098 (Nov/Dec 1999) / Article
Critical reproblemization
Foucault and the task of modern philosophyby Michael Schwartz / RP 091 (Sep/Oct 1998) / Article
It was a matter of analyzing … the problemizations through which being offers itself to be, necessarily thought – and the practices on the basis of which these problemizations are formed.
Michel Foucault, The Use of Pleasure 1
Michel Foucault is well known for having periodically redescribed his previous studies in light of …