First Writings

Author(s) : Jacques Lacan, Translator : Russell Grigg

First Writings

Book Details

  • Publisher : Polity Press
  • Published : October 2024
  • Cover : Hardback
  • Pages : 140
  • Category :
    Forthcoming
  • Category 2 :
    Lacanian Psychoanalysis
  • Catalogue No : 97943
  • ISBN 13 : 9781509561308
  • ISBN 10 : 1509561307
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Before he became an analyst, Lacan was a psychiatrist. The articles in the present volume would not be being republished if they didn’t invite us to read them retroactively. What can they teach us about the formation of this future analyst?

Lacan’s clinical approach is rooted in the uniqueness of each case, which is only ever chosen for its “singularity”. Each one must necessarily present an “original character” or be “atypical”. One might recognise from the outset an orientation towards the “one-by-one” required by the practice of psychoanalysis.

The singularity of each case re-occurs at the level of the clinical details, studied with a concern for precision that extends down to the smallest detail, to the point where the observation may seem labyrinthine to the reader. Lacan will later declare his taste for “fidelity to the symptom’s formal envelope”.

Three other features carry traces of the future. There is the use of the word “structure” to refer to the organisation of an entity that forms a whole, separate from other entities, and detached from the concept of development. There is the importance given to the analysis of the writings of patients. And then there is the related connection established between symptoms and literary creations.

Table of Contents


Translator’s Note
Foreword by Jacques-Alain Miller

Abasia in a Woman Traumatised by War
Simultaneous Madness
Structure of the Paranoiac Psychoses
“Inspired” Writings: Schizography
The Problem of Style and the Psychiatric Conception of Paranoiac Forms of Experience
Motives of Paranoiac Crime: The Papin Sisters’ Crime
Psychology and Aesthetics
Hallucinations and Delusions

References
Notes

About the Author(s)

Jacques Lacan (1901-1981) came to psychoanalysis by way of medicine and psychiatry. In 1951 he turned his attention to the training of analysts, and this was one of the issues which led him and his circle to part company with the Société Psychanalytique de Paris. He became, in 1953, the first President of a new group, the Société Française de Psychanalyse, whose declared aim was a return to the true teaching of Freud. Eleven years later the Société Française was dissolved and, under Lacan's direction, gave birth to the École Freudienne de Paris. Jacques Lacan was a practising psychoanalyst and teacher up until his death in 1981.

More titles by Jacques Lacan

Russell Grigg lectures in philosophy and is the co-ordinator of psychoanalytic studies at Deakin University, Australia. Dr Grigg has a PhD in psychoanalysis and has published extensively on psychoanalysis. He is also known for his translations of the seminars of Jacques Lacan. He is currently a psychoanalyst in private practice.

More titles by Russell Grigg

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