The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis

The Four Fundamental
Concepts of Psychoanalysis  

1981 Norton edition, with variant spelling of psychoanalysis
Author(s) Jacques Lacan
Original title 'Les quatres concepts fondamentaux de la psychanalyse'
Translator Alan Sheridan
Illustrator Jay J. Smith
Cover artist François Leclaire (photo)
Country France
Language French
Series Seminars of Jacques Lacan
Subject(s) Psychoanalysis
Publisher Éditions du Seuil
Publication date 1973
Published in
English
1978
Media type Hardback, paperback
Pages 290
ISBN 0-393-00079-6
OCLC Number 8106863
Preceded by Seminar X
Followed by Seminar XII

The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis (French: Les quatres concepts fondamentaux de la psychanalyse) is the 1977 English translation of a 'transcription of the Seminar held by Jacques Lacan at the École Normale Supérieure in Paris between January and June 1964'.[1]

It was with the 1973 (French) publication that 'Lacan's oral teachings first began to reach the larger audience of the printed word'.[2]

The blurb describes the book as providing "illuminating insights into the mind of the most controversial psychoanalyst since Freud"; and the Seminar, it has been suggested, 'marks the beginning of a new and difficult phase in Lacan's teaching...shift[ing] the central focus of his teaching away from the letter of Freud's texts'.[3]

The 1994 edition contains an introduction by David Macey.

Contents

The Seminar

Lacan's "Seminar" - an annual occurrence over many decades, of which this is the first transcript to be published (though of the eleventh, not the first year) - was 'a central institution in Lacan's long and stormy career as the France's most prominent and most controversial psycho-analyst'.[4]

The Seminar 'was a forum for Lacan rather than for a collective exploration...and although the Seminar played a vital role in the education of a generation of psycho-analysts, it was not part of any formal training programme'.[5]

Contents

Lacan sought in his eleventh Seminar to cover what he called 'the major Freudian concepts - I have isolated four that seem to come within this category...the first two, the unconscious and repetition. The transference - I hope to approach it next time -...[&] lastly, the drive'.[6]

On the drive, 'Lacan reread Freud...in order to emphasize that the four components of the drive — pressure, object, aim, and source — are not natural phenomena: the drive is a montage'.[7]

The appearance during its course of what he called 'the newly published, posthumous work of my friend Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Le Visible et l'invisble ' led Lacan however - 'free as I am to pursue...the way that seems best to me' - into a long detour midway upon 'the eye and the gaze - this is for us the split in which the drive is manifested at the level of the scopic field'.[8] In particular, 'Lacan spends some time on the "otherness" and alterity of mimesis in relation to the gaze'.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ David Macey "Introduction", Jacques Lacan, The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis (1994) p. vii
  2. ^ J. S. Lee, Jacques Lacan (1991) p. 10
  3. ^ Lee, p. 133
  4. ^ Macey, p. vii
  5. ^ Macey, p. viii
  6. ^ Lacan, p. 19
  7. ^ M.-C. Laznik, "Subject of the Drive"
  8. ^ Lacan, p. 70-3
  9. ^ V. C. Sobchack, Carnal Thoughts (2004) p. 92

Further reading

R. Feldstein et al. eds., Reading "Seminar XI" (1995)

External links