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Writing, Speech and Flesh in Lacanian Psychoanalysis Shirley Zisser

Writing, Speech and Flesh in Lacanian Psychoanalysis By Shirley Zisser

Writing, Speech and Flesh in Lacanian Psychoanalysis by Shirley Zisser


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Summary

This book explores the place of the flesh in the linguistically-inflected categories of Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalysis, drawing explicit attention to the organic as an inherent part of the linguistic categories that appear in the writings of Freud and Lacan.

Writing, Speech and Flesh in Lacanian Psychoanalysis Summary

Writing, Speech and Flesh in Lacanian Psychoanalysis: Of Unconscious Grammatology by Shirley Zisser

This book explores the place of the flesh in the linguistically-inflected categories of Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalysis, drawing explicit attention to the organic as an inherent part of the linguistic categories that appear in the writings of Freud and Lacan.

Lacans return to Freud famously involves a linguistic turn in psychoanalysis. The centering of language as a major operator in psychic life often leads to a dualistic or quasi-dualistic view in which language and the enjoyment of the body are polarized. Exploring the intricate connections of the linguistic and the organic in both Lacanian and Freudian psychoanalysis from its beginnings, Zisser shows that surprisingly, and not only in Lacans late teaching, psycho-linguistic categories turn out to be suffused with organicity. After unfolding the remnant of the flesh in the signifier as a major component of Lacans critique of Saussure, using visual artworks as objective correlatives as it does so, the book delineates two forms of psychic writing. These are aligned not only with two fundamental states of the psychic apparatus as described by Freud (pain and satisfaction), but with two ways of sculpting formulated by Alberti in the Renaissance but also referred to by Freud. Continuing in a Derridean vein, the book demonstrates the primacy of writing to speech in psychoanalysis, emphasizing how the relation between speech and writing is not binary but topological, as speech in its psychoanalytic conception is nothing but the folding inside-out of unconscious writing.

Innovatively placing the flesh at the core of its approach, the text also incorporates the seminal work of psychoanalyst Michele Montrelay to articulate the precise relation between the linguistic and the organic. Writing, Speech and Flesh in Lacanian Psychoanalysis will be indispensable to psychoanalysts, literary theorists, rhetoricians, deconstructionists, and those studying at the intersection of psychoanalysis, language, and the visual arts.

About Shirley Zisser

Shirley Zisser practises Lacanian psychoanalysis in Tel Aviv, Israel. She is a member of the World Association of Psychoanalysis (AMP) and an associate professor of English at Tel Aviv University. Her work focuses on the interrelations between poetics, rhetorical and literary theory and psychoanalysis. Her publications include The Risks of Simile in Renaissance Rhetoric (2001), Critical Essays on Shakespeares A Lovers Complaint: Suffering Ecstasy (2005, ed.), Lacanian Interpretations of Shakespeare (2009, ed.) and Art, Death and Lacanian Psychoanalysis (Routledge 2018, with Efrat Biberman).

Table of Contents

Introduction: The smile is a cut 1. Saussurean linguistics and its dis-contents 2. Written in the sand of the flesh: On modes of writing in the psychic apparatus 3. Speaking the written Epilogue: Chiselled from the real The feminine signifier

Additional information

NPB9780367480899
9780367480899
0367480891
Writing, Speech and Flesh in Lacanian Psychoanalysis: Of Unconscious Grammatology by Shirley Zisser
New
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2021-09-14
168
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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