|
USA-VA-HONAKER Κατάλογοι Εταιρεία
|
Εταιρικά Νέα :
- Lacan on Trauma and Causality: A Psychoanalytic Critique of . . .
This article explores the implications of Lacan’s linguistic framework for his understanding of trauma It argues that the Lacanian concept of trauma offers a timely antidote to dominant psychiatric notions of trauma today, linked as they are to the questionable politics of ‘Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder’ and, more recently, of ‘Post
- The Concept of Trauma in Lacanian Psychoanalysis
According to Lacan, there is one essential and common trauma that we all share: in his Seminar X, Lacan goes so far as to suggest that getting born is a traumatic experience—he calls this “le trauma de la naissance” [the trauma of birth] We all share this common trauma, because we all emerge into the same “Other environment ” The
- Trauma and the Real - Touching the Real
In my post on Lacan’s concept of the Real I highlighted the fact that the Real can be seen as an effect of the Symbolic order as opposed to being ‘outside’ of it, which still seems to be a commonly held notion amongst many Lacanians 1 But how does this relate to trauma, which would appear to be the manifestation of the Real par
- Amuse-Bouches V – What Makes a Trauma Traumatic? (Part II)
It implies a theory of trauma which always needs two separate moments in time What makes a trauma traumatic is not just a single important or shocking event – it has to also have an echo in a past event Trauma is not at either of these two moments but is constituted as a trauma only in the second moment (Après-coup: Problématiques VI, p 122)
- The Lacanian theory of trauma – Mark Carrigan
From Bruce Fink’s The Lacanian Subject loc 19662: One of the faces of the real that we deal with in psychoanalysis is trauma If we think of the real as everything that has yet to be symbolized, language no doubt never completely transforms the real, never drains all of the real into the symbolic order; a residuum is always left
- The Study of Trauma from a Lacanian Psychoanalytic Perspective
Lacan supposes that the trauma cannot be articulated and comprehended by the symbolic The traumatic event and its memory have a fundamental lack which fails any attempt to represent them in language
|
|