ABSTRACT

During the third year of his famous seminar, Jacques Lacan gives a concise definition of psychoanalysis: 'Psychoanalysis should be the science of language inhabited by the subject. From the Freudian point of view man is the subject captured and tortured by language.' Since psychosis is a special but emblematic case of language entrapment, Lacan devotes much of this year to grappling with distinctions between the neuroses and the psychoses. As he compared the two, relationships, symmetries, and contrasts emerge that enable him to erect a structure for psychosis.
Freud's famous case of Daniel Paul Schreber is central to Lacan's analysis. In demonstrating the many ways that the psychotic is `inhabited, possessed by language', Lacan draws upon Schreber's own account of his psychosis and upon Freud's notes on this 'case of paranoia'. The analysis of language is both fascinating and enlightening.

part |56 pages

Introduction to the Question of the Psychoses

chapter |13 pages

Introduction to the question of the psychoses

Schizophrenia and Paranoia M. De Clérambault the Mirages of Understanding from Verneining to Verwerfung Psychosis and Psychoanalysis

chapter |13 pages

The meaning of delusion

Critique of Kraepelin Dialectical Inertia Séglas and Psychomotor Hallucination President Schreber

chapter |15 pages

The Other and psychosis

Homosexuality and Paranoia the Word and the Refrain Automatism and Endoscopy Paranoid Knowledge Grammar of the Unconscious

chapter |13 pages

“I've just been to the butcher's”

What Returns in the Real Puppets of Delusion R. S. I. in Language The Erotization of the Signifier

part |101 pages

Thematics and Structure of the Psychotic Phenomenon

chapter |14 pages

On a god who does not deceive and one who does

Psychosis is not A Simple Fact of Language the Dialect of Symptoms it Really must be Rather Pleasant to be a Woman … God and Science Schreber's God

chapter |16 pages

The psychotic phenomenon and its mechanism

Certainty and Reality Schreber is No Poet the Notion of Defense Verdichtung, Verdrangung, Verneinung, and Verwerfung

chapter |13 pages

The imaginary dissolution

Dora and her Quadrilateral Eros and Aggression in the Male Stickleback What is Called the Father the Fragmentation of Identity

chapter |15 pages

The symbolic sentence

The Notion of Defense the Patient's Testimony the Sense of Reality Verbal Phenomena

chapter |13 pages

On nonsense and the structure of God

Principles of the Analysis of Delusion Delusional Interlocution being Forsaken Dialogue and Voluptuousness God's Politics

chapter |13 pages

On the signifier in the real and the bellowing-miracle

Psychiatry's Main Fact The Discourse of Freedom The Peace of the Evening Subjective Topology

chapter |15 pages

On the rejection of a primordial signifier

A Twin that is Big with Delusion Day and Night Verwerfung Letter 52

part |86 pages

On the Signifier and the Signified

chapter |12 pages

The hysteric's question

On the Preverbal World Preconscious and Unconscious Sign, Trace, Signifier a Traumatic Hysteria

chapter |10 pages

The hysteric's question (II): What is a woman?

Dora and the Feminine Organ the Signifying Disymmetry the Symbolic and Procreation Freud and the Signifier

chapter |13 pages

The signifier, as such, signifies nothing

The Notion of Structure Subjectivity in the Real How to Locate the Beginning of a Delusion the Between-I's

chapter |10 pages

On primordial signifiers and the lack of one

A Crossroads Basic Signifiers a New Signifier in the Real Approaches to the Hole Identificatory Compensation

chapter |8 pages

Secretaries to the insane

A Reading Soul Murder the Implications of the Signifier the Little Men the Three Functions of the Father

chapter |8 pages

Metaphor and metonymy (I): “His sheaf was neither miserly nor spiteful”1

The Truth of the Father the Invasion by the Signifier Syntax and Metaphor Wernicke's Aphasia

chapter |9 pages

Metaphor and metonymy (II): Signifying articulation and transference of the signified

Sensory Aphasia and Motor Aphasia the Positional Link All Language is Metalanguage Detail and Desire

chapter |14 pages

An address

Freud in the century

part |79 pages

The Environs of the Hole

chapter |11 pages

The appeal, the allusion

The Onset of Psychosis Speaking out the Madness of Love the Evolution of Delusion

chapter |13 pages

The quilting point

Sense and Scansion the Full Circle and Segmentation “Yes, I Come into his Temple…” the Fear of God the Father, a Quilting Point

chapter |14 pages

“Thou art the one who wilt follow me”

The other is a Locus The You of the Superego Devolution and Observation the Voice Interpellation of the Signifier

chapter |15 pages

“Thou Art”

Forms of Gaps the Verb to be from the Thou to the Other the Tortoise and the Two Ducks the Onset of Psychosis

chapter |14 pages

The phallus and the meteor

Prevalence of Castration IDA Macalpine Natural Symbolization and Sublimation the Rainbow Inserted in the Father