Product Description:
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Paper quality= 70 gsm offwhite (Excellent)
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Cover quality= 260 gsm card
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Digitally printed, with excellent print and paper quality
Book Synopsis:
The evolution of the concept of subjectivity in the works of Jacques Lacan.
Countering the call by some âpro-Lacaniansâ for an end to the exegesis of Lacan's workâand the dismissal by âanti-Lacaniansâ of Lacan as impossibly impenetrableâSubjectivity and Otherness argues for Lacan as a âparadoxically systematicâ thinker, and for the necessity of a close analysis of his texts. Lorenzo Chiesa examines, from a philosophical perspective, the evolution of the concept of subjectivity in Lacan's work, carrying out a detailed reading of the Lacanian subject in its necessary relation to otherness according to Lacan's orders of the Imaginary, the Symbolic, and the Real. Chiesa emphasizes the continuity underlying apparently incompatible phases of Lacan's examination of the subject, describing Lacan's theory as a consistent philosophical systemâbut one that is constantly revised and therefore problematic. Chiesa analyzes each âoldâ theory of the subject within the framework of a ânewâ elaboration and reassesses its fundamental tenets from the perspective of a general psychoanalytic discourse that becomes increasingly complex. From the 1960s on, writes Chiesa, the Lacanian subject amounts to an irreducible lack that must be actively confronted and assumed; this âsubjectivized lack,â Chiesa argues further, offers an escape from the contemporary impasse between the âdeath of the subjectâ alleged by postmodernism and a return to a traditional âsubstantialistâ notion of the subject. An original treatment of psychoanalytic issues, Subjectivity and Otherness fills a significant gap in the existing literature on Lacan, taking seriously the need for a philosophical investigation of Lacanian concepts.

