The Subject in Lacan (1 of 4): The subject is not
Lacan's notion of the subject is radically different from commonplace notions of subjectivity or individuality and also from the post-structural conceptualization of the social role of subject-positions. The Lacanian subject is not a permanent or constant entity; it is the subject as event which - like the unconscious itself - fades and resurfaces, proving not just elusive but discontinuous. We discuss how the subject is 'beyond objectification' (not fitting within the conceptual category of the object), how it is essentially linked to the aims of psychoanalysis (i.e. the realization of the subject) and how it is only in and as speech that the subject emerges.

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The Subject in Lacan (2 of 4): Not ego, not psychological

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The Subject in Lacan (3 of 4): The split that IS the subject

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ChatGPT is the language of the unconscious | Alenka Zupančič

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13. Jacques Lacan in Theory

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Alenka Zupančič, "The Fantasy of the End”

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Lacan on Obsessional Neurosis (1): Obsessional symptoms

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The Lacanian Subject (Descartes and Lacan)

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Love: what psychoanalysis teaches us

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Slavoj Žižek on Lacan – Objet petit a explained using Pokémon GO

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Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

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Lacan’s Most Important Idea

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

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Slavoj Zizek - The Lacanian Real In Culture

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Lacan and Dreams 1: Does Lacan interpret dreams?

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Explained: The Big Other

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Hegel's Dialectics explained according to Žižek & Dolar: "Substance is Subject"

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Lacan's Graphs of Desire: Part I

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The Subject in Lacan: Epilogue (or: 'Against reflexivity!')

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LACAN BY MARCUS POUND

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