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Invention in the Real
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Invention in the Real

Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne

Invention in the Real

Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne

ByLinda Clifton
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2012
eBook Published 8 May 2018
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9780429476228
Pages 304 pages
eBook ISBN 9780429900990
SubjectsBehavioral Sciences
KeywordsFree Association, Clinical Practice, Jean Allouch, Borromean Knot, Argentinian Anticommunist Alliance
Get Citation

Get Citation

Clifton, L. (2012). Invention in the Real. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429476228
ABOUT THIS BOOK

The Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne, Volume 24 give testament to that quasi - suicidal risk taken by analysts and members of the school, in applying, not a technique, but the Freudian method to their clinical practice, to their seminars, to their writing and to the functioning of the School itself. In pursuing a practice that seeks to avoid the inertia spoken of by Lacan, the contributors to this volume take the risk of encountering the impasses of the clinic today and the incompleteness of Lacanian theory with invention. Being marked by the residue of the psychoanalytic clinic they continue to work their transference to that clinic and to the texts of Freud and Lacan. Included in this volume is a paper by Oscar Zentner, founder of the School as well as translations of papers and extracts from books by analysts from overseas.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|10 pages
Time and History
chapter 1|8 pages
Must every psychoanalyst recapitulate the history of psychoanalysis in his own way?
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 2|10 pages
Once upon a time
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 3|10 pages
On Nachträglichkeit
ByChristiane Weller
View abstract
chapter 4|10 pages
Time out of number
ByPeter Gunn *
View abstract
chapter 5|12 pages
The origin of language
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
part II|8 pages
The Lacanian Clinic Today
chapter 6|6 pages
The necessity and impossibility of interpretation
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 7|10 pages
Maltreating the individual
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 8|8 pages
The child and seduction 1
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 9|8 pages
How to do a psychoanalytic clinic: a recipe for madness
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 10|10 pages
The Gospel according to Saint Jacques
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
part III|8 pages
Psychoanalysis and the Child
chapter 11|6 pages
Psychoanalysis and the child
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo, Michael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 12|12 pages
The treatment setting: demand, transference and the contract with the parents and for their child
ByJean Bergès, Gabriel Balbo
View abstract
chapter 13|8 pages
Some cases of “name of the father subject supposed of knowledge”
ByErik Porge
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Father can't you see that I am burning?—interventions in the real of the parental couple
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
part IV|12 pages
On Love and Knowledge
chapter 15|10 pages
The promise of love
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 16|6 pages
In the style of loving
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
chapter 17|6 pages
The conduct of love in psychoanalysis
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
part V|12 pages
Analysis, The Arts and the Well Spoken
chapter 18|10 pages
The Ob-scene
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 19|14 pages
The jouissance of The Gambler
ByLinda Clifton
View abstract
chapter 20|10 pages
Freud and Faust
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 21|12 pages
The Invention of Solitude—the invention of a style
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
chapter 22|14 pages
The enigma of Rrose Selavy
ByMadeline Andrews
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
The art of interpretation—drawing a line 1
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
part VI|10 pages
Death and Psychoanalysis
chapter 24|8 pages
An architecture of death from Tanizaki to Mishima
ByOscar Zentner
View abstract
chapter 25|18 pages
Erotics of mourning in the time of dry death
ByJean Allouch
View abstract
chapter 26|6 pages
Psychoanalysis in the hospital
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 27|6 pages
Wallis Simpson and the three As
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 28|6 pages
Death and psychoanalysis 1
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract

The Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne, Volume 24 give testament to that quasi - suicidal risk taken by analysts and members of the school, in applying, not a technique, but the Freudian method to their clinical practice, to their seminars, to their writing and to the functioning of the School itself. In pursuing a practice that seeks to avoid the inertia spoken of by Lacan, the contributors to this volume take the risk of encountering the impasses of the clinic today and the incompleteness of Lacanian theory with invention. Being marked by the residue of the psychoanalytic clinic they continue to work their transference to that clinic and to the texts of Freud and Lacan. Included in this volume is a paper by Oscar Zentner, founder of the School as well as translations of papers and extracts from books by analysts from overseas.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|10 pages
Time and History
chapter 1|8 pages
Must every psychoanalyst recapitulate the history of psychoanalysis in his own way?
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 2|10 pages
Once upon a time
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 3|10 pages
On Nachträglichkeit
ByChristiane Weller
View abstract
chapter 4|10 pages
Time out of number
ByPeter Gunn *
View abstract
chapter 5|12 pages
The origin of language
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
part II|8 pages
The Lacanian Clinic Today
chapter 6|6 pages
The necessity and impossibility of interpretation
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 7|10 pages
Maltreating the individual
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 8|8 pages
The child and seduction 1
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 9|8 pages
How to do a psychoanalytic clinic: a recipe for madness
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 10|10 pages
The Gospel according to Saint Jacques
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
part III|8 pages
Psychoanalysis and the Child
chapter 11|6 pages
Psychoanalysis and the child
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo, Michael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 12|12 pages
The treatment setting: demand, transference and the contract with the parents and for their child
ByJean Bergès, Gabriel Balbo
View abstract
chapter 13|8 pages
Some cases of “name of the father subject supposed of knowledge”
ByErik Porge
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Father can't you see that I am burning?—interventions in the real of the parental couple
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
part IV|12 pages
On Love and Knowledge
chapter 15|10 pages
The promise of love
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 16|6 pages
In the style of loving
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
chapter 17|6 pages
The conduct of love in psychoanalysis
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
part V|12 pages
Analysis, The Arts and the Well Spoken
chapter 18|10 pages
The Ob-scene
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 19|14 pages
The jouissance of The Gambler
ByLinda Clifton
View abstract
chapter 20|10 pages
Freud and Faust
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 21|12 pages
The Invention of Solitude—the invention of a style
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
chapter 22|14 pages
The enigma of Rrose Selavy
ByMadeline Andrews
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
The art of interpretation—drawing a line 1
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
part VI|10 pages
Death and Psychoanalysis
chapter 24|8 pages
An architecture of death from Tanizaki to Mishima
ByOscar Zentner
View abstract
chapter 25|18 pages
Erotics of mourning in the time of dry death
ByJean Allouch
View abstract
chapter 26|6 pages
Psychoanalysis in the hospital
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 27|6 pages
Wallis Simpson and the three As
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 28|6 pages
Death and psychoanalysis 1
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

The Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne, Volume 24 give testament to that quasi - suicidal risk taken by analysts and members of the school, in applying, not a technique, but the Freudian method to their clinical practice, to their seminars, to their writing and to the functioning of the School itself. In pursuing a practice that seeks to avoid the inertia spoken of by Lacan, the contributors to this volume take the risk of encountering the impasses of the clinic today and the incompleteness of Lacanian theory with invention. Being marked by the residue of the psychoanalytic clinic they continue to work their transference to that clinic and to the texts of Freud and Lacan. Included in this volume is a paper by Oscar Zentner, founder of the School as well as translations of papers and extracts from books by analysts from overseas.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|10 pages
Time and History
chapter 1|8 pages
Must every psychoanalyst recapitulate the history of psychoanalysis in his own way?
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 2|10 pages
Once upon a time
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 3|10 pages
On Nachträglichkeit
ByChristiane Weller
View abstract
chapter 4|10 pages
Time out of number
ByPeter Gunn *
View abstract
chapter 5|12 pages
The origin of language
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
part II|8 pages
The Lacanian Clinic Today
chapter 6|6 pages
The necessity and impossibility of interpretation
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 7|10 pages
Maltreating the individual
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 8|8 pages
The child and seduction 1
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 9|8 pages
How to do a psychoanalytic clinic: a recipe for madness
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 10|10 pages
The Gospel according to Saint Jacques
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
part III|8 pages
Psychoanalysis and the Child
chapter 11|6 pages
Psychoanalysis and the child
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo, Michael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 12|12 pages
The treatment setting: demand, transference and the contract with the parents and for their child
ByJean Bergès, Gabriel Balbo
View abstract
chapter 13|8 pages
Some cases of “name of the father subject supposed of knowledge”
ByErik Porge
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Father can't you see that I am burning?—interventions in the real of the parental couple
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
part IV|12 pages
On Love and Knowledge
chapter 15|10 pages
The promise of love
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 16|6 pages
In the style of loving
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
chapter 17|6 pages
The conduct of love in psychoanalysis
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
part V|12 pages
Analysis, The Arts and the Well Spoken
chapter 18|10 pages
The Ob-scene
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 19|14 pages
The jouissance of The Gambler
ByLinda Clifton
View abstract
chapter 20|10 pages
Freud and Faust
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 21|12 pages
The Invention of Solitude—the invention of a style
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
chapter 22|14 pages
The enigma of Rrose Selavy
ByMadeline Andrews
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
The art of interpretation—drawing a line 1
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
part VI|10 pages
Death and Psychoanalysis
chapter 24|8 pages
An architecture of death from Tanizaki to Mishima
ByOscar Zentner
View abstract
chapter 25|18 pages
Erotics of mourning in the time of dry death
ByJean Allouch
View abstract
chapter 26|6 pages
Psychoanalysis in the hospital
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 27|6 pages
Wallis Simpson and the three As
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 28|6 pages
Death and psychoanalysis 1
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract

The Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne, Volume 24 give testament to that quasi - suicidal risk taken by analysts and members of the school, in applying, not a technique, but the Freudian method to their clinical practice, to their seminars, to their writing and to the functioning of the School itself. In pursuing a practice that seeks to avoid the inertia spoken of by Lacan, the contributors to this volume take the risk of encountering the impasses of the clinic today and the incompleteness of Lacanian theory with invention. Being marked by the residue of the psychoanalytic clinic they continue to work their transference to that clinic and to the texts of Freud and Lacan. Included in this volume is a paper by Oscar Zentner, founder of the School as well as translations of papers and extracts from books by analysts from overseas.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|10 pages
Time and History
chapter 1|8 pages
Must every psychoanalyst recapitulate the history of psychoanalysis in his own way?
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 2|10 pages
Once upon a time
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 3|10 pages
On Nachträglichkeit
ByChristiane Weller
View abstract
chapter 4|10 pages
Time out of number
ByPeter Gunn *
View abstract
chapter 5|12 pages
The origin of language
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
part II|8 pages
The Lacanian Clinic Today
chapter 6|6 pages
The necessity and impossibility of interpretation
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 7|10 pages
Maltreating the individual
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 8|8 pages
The child and seduction 1
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 9|8 pages
How to do a psychoanalytic clinic: a recipe for madness
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 10|10 pages
The Gospel according to Saint Jacques
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
part III|8 pages
Psychoanalysis and the Child
chapter 11|6 pages
Psychoanalysis and the child
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo, Michael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 12|12 pages
The treatment setting: demand, transference and the contract with the parents and for their child
ByJean Bergès, Gabriel Balbo
View abstract
chapter 13|8 pages
Some cases of “name of the father subject supposed of knowledge”
ByErik Porge
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Father can't you see that I am burning?—interventions in the real of the parental couple
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
part IV|12 pages
On Love and Knowledge
chapter 15|10 pages
The promise of love
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 16|6 pages
In the style of loving
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
chapter 17|6 pages
The conduct of love in psychoanalysis
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
part V|12 pages
Analysis, The Arts and the Well Spoken
chapter 18|10 pages
The Ob-scene
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 19|14 pages
The jouissance of The Gambler
ByLinda Clifton
View abstract
chapter 20|10 pages
Freud and Faust
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 21|12 pages
The Invention of Solitude—the invention of a style
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
chapter 22|14 pages
The enigma of Rrose Selavy
ByMadeline Andrews
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
The art of interpretation—drawing a line 1
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
part VI|10 pages
Death and Psychoanalysis
chapter 24|8 pages
An architecture of death from Tanizaki to Mishima
ByOscar Zentner
View abstract
chapter 25|18 pages
Erotics of mourning in the time of dry death
ByJean Allouch
View abstract
chapter 26|6 pages
Psychoanalysis in the hospital
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 27|6 pages
Wallis Simpson and the three As
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 28|6 pages
Death and psychoanalysis 1
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

The Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne, Volume 24 give testament to that quasi - suicidal risk taken by analysts and members of the school, in applying, not a technique, but the Freudian method to their clinical practice, to their seminars, to their writing and to the functioning of the School itself. In pursuing a practice that seeks to avoid the inertia spoken of by Lacan, the contributors to this volume take the risk of encountering the impasses of the clinic today and the incompleteness of Lacanian theory with invention. Being marked by the residue of the psychoanalytic clinic they continue to work their transference to that clinic and to the texts of Freud and Lacan. Included in this volume is a paper by Oscar Zentner, founder of the School as well as translations of papers and extracts from books by analysts from overseas.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|10 pages
Time and History
chapter 1|8 pages
Must every psychoanalyst recapitulate the history of psychoanalysis in his own way?
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 2|10 pages
Once upon a time
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 3|10 pages
On Nachträglichkeit
ByChristiane Weller
View abstract
chapter 4|10 pages
Time out of number
ByPeter Gunn *
View abstract
chapter 5|12 pages
The origin of language
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
part II|8 pages
The Lacanian Clinic Today
chapter 6|6 pages
The necessity and impossibility of interpretation
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 7|10 pages
Maltreating the individual
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 8|8 pages
The child and seduction 1
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 9|8 pages
How to do a psychoanalytic clinic: a recipe for madness
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 10|10 pages
The Gospel according to Saint Jacques
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
part III|8 pages
Psychoanalysis and the Child
chapter 11|6 pages
Psychoanalysis and the child
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo, Michael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 12|12 pages
The treatment setting: demand, transference and the contract with the parents and for their child
ByJean Bergès, Gabriel Balbo
View abstract
chapter 13|8 pages
Some cases of “name of the father subject supposed of knowledge”
ByErik Porge
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Father can't you see that I am burning?—interventions in the real of the parental couple
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
part IV|12 pages
On Love and Knowledge
chapter 15|10 pages
The promise of love
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 16|6 pages
In the style of loving
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
chapter 17|6 pages
The conduct of love in psychoanalysis
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
part V|12 pages
Analysis, The Arts and the Well Spoken
chapter 18|10 pages
The Ob-scene
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 19|14 pages
The jouissance of The Gambler
ByLinda Clifton
View abstract
chapter 20|10 pages
Freud and Faust
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 21|12 pages
The Invention of Solitude—the invention of a style
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
chapter 22|14 pages
The enigma of Rrose Selavy
ByMadeline Andrews
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
The art of interpretation—drawing a line 1
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
part VI|10 pages
Death and Psychoanalysis
chapter 24|8 pages
An architecture of death from Tanizaki to Mishima
ByOscar Zentner
View abstract
chapter 25|18 pages
Erotics of mourning in the time of dry death
ByJean Allouch
View abstract
chapter 26|6 pages
Psychoanalysis in the hospital
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 27|6 pages
Wallis Simpson and the three As
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 28|6 pages
Death and psychoanalysis 1
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract

The Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne, Volume 24 give testament to that quasi - suicidal risk taken by analysts and members of the school, in applying, not a technique, but the Freudian method to their clinical practice, to their seminars, to their writing and to the functioning of the School itself. In pursuing a practice that seeks to avoid the inertia spoken of by Lacan, the contributors to this volume take the risk of encountering the impasses of the clinic today and the incompleteness of Lacanian theory with invention. Being marked by the residue of the psychoanalytic clinic they continue to work their transference to that clinic and to the texts of Freud and Lacan. Included in this volume is a paper by Oscar Zentner, founder of the School as well as translations of papers and extracts from books by analysts from overseas.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|10 pages
Time and History
chapter 1|8 pages
Must every psychoanalyst recapitulate the history of psychoanalysis in his own way?
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 2|10 pages
Once upon a time
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 3|10 pages
On Nachträglichkeit
ByChristiane Weller
View abstract
chapter 4|10 pages
Time out of number
ByPeter Gunn *
View abstract
chapter 5|12 pages
The origin of language
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
part II|8 pages
The Lacanian Clinic Today
chapter 6|6 pages
The necessity and impossibility of interpretation
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 7|10 pages
Maltreating the individual
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 8|8 pages
The child and seduction 1
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 9|8 pages
How to do a psychoanalytic clinic: a recipe for madness
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
chapter 10|10 pages
The Gospel according to Saint Jacques
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
part III|8 pages
Psychoanalysis and the Child
chapter 11|6 pages
Psychoanalysis and the child
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo, Michael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 12|12 pages
The treatment setting: demand, transference and the contract with the parents and for their child
ByJean Bergès, Gabriel Balbo
View abstract
chapter 13|8 pages
Some cases of “name of the father subject supposed of knowledge”
ByErik Porge
View abstract
chapter 14|10 pages
Father can't you see that I am burning?—interventions in the real of the parental couple
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
part IV|12 pages
On Love and Knowledge
chapter 15|10 pages
The promise of love
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 16|6 pages
In the style of loving
ByRodney Kleiman
View abstract
chapter 17|6 pages
The conduct of love in psychoanalysis
ByPeter Gunn
View abstract
part V|12 pages
Analysis, The Arts and the Well Spoken
chapter 18|10 pages
The Ob-scene
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
chapter 19|14 pages
The jouissance of The Gambler
ByLinda Clifton
View abstract
chapter 20|10 pages
Freud and Faust
ByMichael Plastow
View abstract
chapter 21|12 pages
The Invention of Solitude—the invention of a style
ByTine Norregaard Arroyo
View abstract
chapter 22|14 pages
The enigma of Rrose Selavy
ByMadeline Andrews
View abstract
chapter 23|14 pages
The art of interpretation—drawing a line 1
ByDavid Pereira
View abstract
part VI|10 pages
Death and Psychoanalysis
chapter 24|8 pages
An architecture of death from Tanizaki to Mishima
ByOscar Zentner
View abstract
chapter 25|18 pages
Erotics of mourning in the time of dry death
ByJean Allouch
View abstract
chapter 26|6 pages
Psychoanalysis in the hospital
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 27|6 pages
Wallis Simpson and the three As
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
chapter 28|6 pages
Death and psychoanalysis 1
ByGustavo Etkin
View abstract
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