1st Edition

Lacan and Levi-Strauss or The Return to Freud (1951-1957)

By Markos Zafiropoulos Copyright 2010
    242 Pages
    by Routledge

    242 Pages
    by Routledge

    Lacan and Levi-Strauss are often mentioned together in reviews of French structuralist thought, but what really links their distinct projects? In this important study, the author shows how Lacan's famous 'return to Freud' was only made possible through Lacan's reading of Levi-Strauss. Via a careful and illuminating comparison of the work of the psychoanalyst and that of the anthropologist, Zafiropoulos shows how Lacan's theories of the symbolic function, of the power of language, of the role of the father and even of the unconscious itself owe a major debt to Levi-Strauss. Lacan and Levi-Strauss is much more than an academic study of the relations between these two thinkers: it is also a superb introduction to the work of Lacan, setting out with detail and lucidity the major concepts of his work in the 1950s.

    NOTE TO THE READER AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS INTRODUCTION * The young Lacan CHAPTER ONE * The transcendence of the imaginary by the symbolic or the mirror stage and the symbolic function * Freud's technique, transference from Lacan to Freud, and the post-Freudians' resistance to Freud * The effectiveness of symbols: From Anna Freud to Claude Levi-Strauss * From the mirror stage to the inverted bouquet CHAPTER TWO * The subject receives from the Other his own message in an inverted form: An investigation * Presentation on Transference (1951) * The Freudian Thing or the Meaning of the Return to Freud in PsychoanalysisA" * 1953 * The Rome Report: The Function and Field of Speech and Language in PsychoanalysisA" or testifying to a pass (September 1953) CHAPTER THREE * The name of the father, psychosis and phobia * From the Rat Man to little Hans: The question of the Name-of-the-Father * The institutional forms of the zero value * Object Relations: Book IV of the Seminar, 1956-1957 CONCLUSION * The doxa: Its ideals and the repression of Levi-Strauss * Louis Althusser's point of view * The essential: Lacan's point of view * Thanks to Levi-Strauss POSTLUDE * Making the world incomplete * The lack in the other * Lacan as a critic of Levi-Strauss * The sublime excommunicant BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX

    Biography

    Markos Zafiropoulos