A. What is a 'quilting-point' in Lacanian theory?
Lacan, we have a problem. Lacanian theorizations of psychotic speech emphasize both how such speech seems overly concrete (overly literal) and free-floating, disconnected from conventional meanings. Which is it? How are we to understand how words and meanings become so detached in psychosis? We describe Lacan's idea of the 'point de caption' or 'quilting point' as a way of understanding how, in neurotic speech, words and meanings come to be attached in a conventional way which still permits for semantic ambiguities. Link to board: https://drive.google.com/drive/folder...

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Narcissism in Freud and Lacan (primary and secondary forms)

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The Lacanian Unconscious (2 of 4) : Logical time

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Gottlob Frege - On Sense and Reference

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Shannon Bell Jacques lacan, ‘The Line and Light’ and ‘What is a Picture ’

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Seminar XI -- Lecture 1

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Lacan on countertransference or: interpretation via the signifier: Derek Hook and John Dall’Aglio

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Lacan, the Phallus, and the Oedipus

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Signification and Subjectivity

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"The Borromean Knot of Jacques Lacan; Or, How to Beat Your Death Drive" a lecture by Aron Dunlap

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13. Jacques Lacan in Theory

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The Lacanian Unconscious (4 of 4): The signifying chain

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Full lecture: The Master Signifier (Žižek/Lacan explained)

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Kafka in 60 Minuten (Kafka als Philosoph)

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“Stop the machine!” – Jonathan Pageau’s speech that STUNNED ARC 2026

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Lacan's theory of the four discourses (1): Introduction

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PSYCHOTHERAPY - Jacques Lacan

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Melancholia - A Lacanian Approach (1)

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Lacan's Gaze

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Lacan and Topology with Ellie Ragland

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