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  1. Jan 1, 2005 · 3.77. 201 ratings23 reviews. What astonishing success the Name-of-the-Father has had! Everyone finds something in it. Who one’s father is isn’t immediately obvious, hardly being visible to the naked eye. Paternity is determined first and foremost by one’s culture. As Lacan said, "the Name-of-the-Father creates the function of the father."

  2. May 24, 2019 · Father as Third Term. Lacan 's emphasis on the importance of the father can be seen as a reaction against the tendency of Kleinian psychoanalysis and object-relations theory to place the mother - child relation at the heart of psychoanalytic theory .In opposition to this tendency, Lacan continually stresses the role of the father as a third ...

  3. May 20, 2019 · Imaginary, Symbolic and Real Mother. Lacan argues that it is important to distinguish between the real mother, the symbolic mother, and the imaginary mother. The mother manifests herself in the real as the primary caretaker of the infant. The infant is incapable of satisfying its own needs and so depends absolutely on an Other to care for him ...

  4. "For neurotics the Names-of-the father are properly repressed and lie forever in the unconscious. But in psychosis the Names-of-the-father have not been properly repressed." - Philip Hill's intro to Lacan So language is more consistent when it is repressed, but more complete (but inconsistent) when it is not.

  5. Oct 5, 2015 · Paperback. $17.19 4 Used from $15.23 21 New from $12.95. What astonishing success the Name-of-the-Father has had! Everyone finds something in it. Who one's father is isn't immediately obvious, hardly being visible to the naked eye. Paternity is first and foremost determined by one's culture. As Lacan said, "The Name-of-the-Father creates the ...

    • Paperback
    • Jacques Lacan
  6. It is the signifier that inaugurates the symbolic, which is exactly the realm of metonymy and sublimation (desire). foreclosing the Name of the Father leads to psychosis, according to Lacan (at least earlier Lacan). Zizek claims in Less Than Nothing (2012, perlego 7/29) that in a successful PsyAn we learn to use the NAme of the Father. he says ...

  7. The “law of the father” is a term usually associated with the work of Jacques Lacan in his psychoanalytic account of the way in which children enter into patriarchal culture. Lacan identified three phases of psychosocial development involved in this process: the “imaginary order,” the “mirror stage,” and the “symbolic order.”.

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