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Lacan's Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis
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Lacan's Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis
Current price: $34.00
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Lacan's Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis
Current price: $34.00
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The informal tone of these ten lectures by Roberto Harari reflects their original character as classes held at El Centro de Extension Psicoanalitica del Centro Cultural General, San Martin Buenos Aires. Destined for a wider audience than just the psychoanalytical camp, Harari's work presents the Lacanian endeavor without presupposition of specialized knowledge—and yet without conceding intellectual subtlety.
Harari provides an introductory display of essential themes developed in
Lacan's Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis
, and offers his own insightful reading of the text's central ideas. These ten classes, sparked by the crucial
Seminar XI
within the teaching of Lacan, reframe a wide range of questions in psychoanalysis for the professional in the field, scholars and students across disciplines, and interested lay readers.
Harari is so at ease with Lacan's oeuvre that he can dismantle and rebuild its structure so that order and logic suddenly appear inherent to Lacan's way of thinking. The unconscious, transference, repetition, and the drive are here reintroduced, not only to do justice to Freud's insights, but also to link these concepts to the larger question of the complex relationships between psychoanalysis, religion, and science. Harari's didactic approach and his analytic style come together to bring us one step closer to understanding Lacan and one step closer to understanding ourselves.
Harari provides an introductory display of essential themes developed in
Lacan's Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis
, and offers his own insightful reading of the text's central ideas. These ten classes, sparked by the crucial
Seminar XI
within the teaching of Lacan, reframe a wide range of questions in psychoanalysis for the professional in the field, scholars and students across disciplines, and interested lay readers.
Harari is so at ease with Lacan's oeuvre that he can dismantle and rebuild its structure so that order and logic suddenly appear inherent to Lacan's way of thinking. The unconscious, transference, repetition, and the drive are here reintroduced, not only to do justice to Freud's insights, but also to link these concepts to the larger question of the complex relationships between psychoanalysis, religion, and science. Harari's didactic approach and his analytic style come together to bring us one step closer to understanding Lacan and one step closer to understanding ourselves.