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Jacques Lacan by Barbara Bray β€” book cover

Jacques Lacan

by Barbara Bray
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Overview

Years after his death, Jacques Lacan remains not only one of the foremost intellectuals of the century, but also one of the most controversial. The first major biography of Lacan, this is a fascinating portrait of the man's life and an illuminating explication of his complex liasons and unorthodox, often perplexing ideas.

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Editorials

Perry Meisel

Roudinesco captures the freshness of the intellectual world in which Lacan's developing notions were concocted, before the parochialism of his heirs rendered Lacanian thinking monolithic and humorless. . . . a welcome aid to keeping him in perspective.

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

French psychiatrist Jacques Lacan (1901- 1981) tried to provide a philosophical basis for Freudianism, which gained him prestige in his native land. Lacan accorded "paramount importance to what is said" and posited parallels between the structure of language and the unconsciouswhich explains his particular influence on literary theorists. The present biography is written in stately, heavy prose by a French historian, psychoanalyst and critic, who dutifully explicates Lacan's work, but also includes lots of fun details about some very weird French people, like the surrealist writer Georges Bataille, who proudly declared, "I jerked myself off, naked, at night, in the presence of my mother's corpse." Piling up enormous wealth and prestige, Lacan became a noted collector of modern art masterpieces and rare books. He was also determined to "collect all women," as Roudinesco puts it. While the author was aided by various of Lacan's relations, this is not a sugary account of the man's life. Lacan comes across as an often difficult figure; he often threw patients out or pulled their hair if they didn't speak enough to satisfy him (though these abbreviated sessions did not mean Lacan returned the high fees they paid). He was equally rude to friends: while visiting Claude Lvi-Strauss one dinnertime, he ate all the food on his hosts' plates. In conspicuous contrast to Lacan's famously abstruse writings, this accountfrom the psychiatrist's birth into a family of vinegar-makers to his last words, "I'm stubborn... I'm dying"makes for a lively read. (Apr.)

Book Details

Published
July 16, 1999
Publisher
New York : Columbia University Press, c1997.
Pages
574
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780231101479

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