ABSTRACT

This is the first collection of essays to offer a comprehensive analysis of, and reflection on, the major themes emergent in Jacques Lacan’s seminars of 1955-56 and 1956-57: Seminar IV – the object relation, and Seminar V – formations of the unconscious.

Assessing the value of a clinical approach orientated around the question of the object lack in the contemporary clinic, the book comprises 16 chapters which follow the development of a range of concepts elaborated by Lacan in these seminars, including sustained engagement with his critique of object relations theory. It considers the effectiveness of these early ideas in clinical practice in relation to hysteria, phobia, fetishism, obsessional neurosis, and of the so-called "Borderline" case. Lacan’s early concepts are also subjected to critique for engagement with Queer theory, and research in asexuality or the operation(s) of the signifier Phallus.

The chapters build to provide an invaluable resource to interpret and evaluate Lacan’s early teaching, and to find in his early concepts a fresh utility and scope for both clinical work and psychoanalytic research and enquiry. The book will be of great interest to Lacanian scholars and students, as well as psychoanalytic therapists, and analysts interested in Lacan’s early work.

part 1|2 pages

Phobia/Fetish

chapter 1|12 pages

Drawing the urinary trait

2Fantasy and analytic technique in Ruth Lebovici’s treatment of a transitory perversion

chapter 3|11 pages

“Once bitten, forever smitten”

Phobias, fetishes, and small boys

chapter 4|11 pages

The phobic and fetish objects

part 2|2 pages

Lack

chapter 5|12 pages

Privation

51A logical step between castration and frustration

chapter 7|10 pages

Much ado about more than nothing

Thoughts on “difficult” cases and Lacan’s Seminar IV

part 3|2 pages

Phallus

chapter 8|14 pages

The phallus of the fifties

86Those years of “tranquil possession”

chapter 9|11 pages

The phallus

Crossroads or impasse? Queering desire via Seminar V

chapter 10|12 pages

To be or not to be the phallus

Lacan, Genet and Wilde

part 4|2 pages

Witz

chapter 11|10 pages

Lacan reading Freud

126On the relationship of Seminar V to “Jokes and Their Relationship to the Unconscious”

chapter 12|13 pages

“Did you hear that Tom’s dick was hairy?”

Witz, cure, and the transmission of psychoanalysis

part 5|2 pages

Graph of desire

part 6|2 pages

Paternal Metaphor

chapter 14|11 pages

Father love

165From Oedipus complex to Paternal Metaphor

part 7|2 pages

Obsessional

chapter 15|10 pages

“Why can’t a woman be more like a man?”

178The obsessional and the signifier

chapter 16|12 pages

Obsessional desire in Seminar V

The exploits of Tantalus