ABSTRACT

The law of the mother is made up of words charged with pleasure and suffering that leave their mark on us in early childhood. In this groundbreaking book, Geneviève Morel explores whether it is possible for the child to escape subjection from this maternal law and develop their own sexual identity.

Through clinical examples and critical commentary, the book illustrates the range and power of maternal influence on the child, and how this can generate different forms of sexual ambiguity. Using a Lacanian framework which revises the classical idea of the Oedipus complex, the book is not only a major contribution to gender studies but also an invaluable aid to the clinician dealing with questions of sexual identity. The book avoids many of the moral and political prejudices that paralyse twenty-first century society, be they related to legislation on marriage, parentage or adoption, the status of "mental health", or the limits to the supposed ownership of the human body.

Insightful and revealing, The Law of the Mother will be of great interest to Lacanian psychoanalysts, as well as to researchers in the fields of gender studies and sexuality.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part One|2 pages

Symptom, Fantasy And Pathologies Of The Law

chapter Chapter I|26 pages

The law of the mother and the symptom that separates

chapter Chapter II|14 pages

A critique of the fundamental fantasy

part Two|2 pages

Lacan And The Sinthome

chapter Chapter III|24 pages

Freudian constructions and Lacanian reductions

chapter Chapter IV|30 pages

The symptom abolishes the symbol

chapter Chapter V|34 pages

The young man without an ego

part Three|2 pages

The Sinthome And The Relation To The Other – Filiation, Transmission, Sexuation

chapter Chapter VI|44 pages

Extensions of the symptom

chapter Chapter VII|16 pages

Psychoanalytic uses of the sinthome

chapter Chapter VIII|14 pages

Sinthome and sexual ambiguity

part Four|2 pages

The Ambiguous Man, His Mother And His Sinthome

chapter Chapter IX|46 pages

Gide

Masks and sinthome

chapter Chapter X|36 pages

Three cases of sexual ambiguity in men

chapter |14 pages

Conclusion

The sinthome is sexual