Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Bibliographical Note
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- Introduction: Locating the Lacanian Left
- PART I Theory: Dialectics of Disavowal
- 1 Antinomies of Creativity: Lacan and Castoriadis on Social Construction and the Political
- 2 Laclau with Lacan on Jouissance: Negotiating the Affective Limits of Discourse
- 3 Žižekian ‘Perversions’: The Lure of Antigone and the Fetishism of the Act
- PART II Analysis: Dialectics of Enjoyment
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - Antinomies of Creativity: Lacan and Castoriadis on Social Construction and the Political
from PART I - Theory: Dialectics of Disavowal
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Bibliographical Note
- Acknowledgements
- Dedication
- Introduction: Locating the Lacanian Left
- PART I Theory: Dialectics of Disavowal
- 1 Antinomies of Creativity: Lacan and Castoriadis on Social Construction and the Political
- 2 Laclau with Lacan on Jouissance: Negotiating the Affective Limits of Discourse
- 3 Žižekian ‘Perversions’: The Lure of Antigone and the Fetishism of the Act
- PART II Analysis: Dialectics of Enjoyment
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
I am autonomous only if I am the origin of what will be and I know myself as such.
Cornelius CastoriadisThe radical heteronomy that Freud's discovery shows gaping within man can never again be covered over without whatever is used to hide it being profoundly dishonest …
Jacques LacanHostility overcome
Of all the theorists examined in this book, Cornelius Castoriadis is neither the most well-known nor the closest one to Lacan's legacy. However, the decision to put this chapter first is not entirely arbitrary. From a historical point of view, Castoriadis was one of the first major political and social theorists of the Left – a founding member of the famous Socialisme ou barbarie group – to engage so closely with Lacanianism, and already in the 1960s. More importantly, exactly because he was gradually led to a violent rejection of Lacanian theory, his work can function as an external frontier, helping us to delimit the emerging terrain of the Lacanian Left. However, and this is indicative of the force of Lacan's work, this external limit is by no means radically external. To determine clearly what is at stake, from the point of view of political theory, in the clash between what the names of Castoriadis and Lacan stand for, presupposes an understanding of what they both share – rather, of what Castoriadis retained from Lacan's theoretical apparatus even after taking his distance from Lacanian circles. And this is quite a lot. Yet there is also another important reason which justifies the location of this chapter.
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- Information
- The Lacanian LeftPsychoanalysis Theory Politics, pp. 37 - 65Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2007