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It clears up some — but not all — of the obscurity.
 
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le.vert.galant | 7 other reviews | Nov 12, 2024 |
My rationale for reading 'Introducing Lacan' was that I aspire one day to finish a book by Slavoj Žižek. Žižek is a contemporary left-wing political philosopher who shares my fascination with Robespierre, so of course I want to read his books. Unfortunately, my attempts thus far have been stymied by Žižek's copious use of Lacanian terms (and other philosophical/psychological language that I don't understand). A quick internet search is insufficient to provide clarity, especially as I've never studied psychology.

So, did this book help me understand Lacan's ideas and, by extension, language? Yes, insofar as I previously didn't understand them at all. That said, I think I need to reread this book at least once and maybe read another similar text. I am certainly not ready to explain Lacan's graph of desire, although the idea of it appeals. That said, Lacan is supposed to be difficult, so I'm not surprised. Moreover, I now feel like I want to read more about psychoanalysis, which it turns out is rather fascinating.

The elements of Lacan's work that I found most approachable concerned language (a structure) as distinct from speech (a performance). I liked Lacan's thoughts on the process of assigning meaning to language during childhood. The idea of a chain of signifiers, which reveal meaning in the space between them, is also useful. I've always found the importance of words to human identity and personality very interesting. (At one point, I had this idea that a human soul consists of a tangle of words; I strongly identified human consciousness with use of words. Then I came across a thought experiment - a baby is born that can use none of the five senses and grows up unable to sense their surroundings or communicate. Can they be said to possess consciousness as we understand it? If so, would they spontaneously structure their thoughts in words, without any external example of language to follow? I have no answers, but that thought experiment blew my mind. And ruined any clarity I ever had about whether I believed in a human soul.)

Other terms that I now have at least some understanding of thanks to this book: jouissance, phantasy, transference (which Lacan understood differently to Freud, it seems), and the phallus. I liked the irony of the word phallus being used so frequently at one point in this book that it lost all meaning. This amused me because to Lacan 'the phallus' is (as I understand it) always an absent object, not meaningless but literally meaning nothing(ness). This also made me wonder to what extent the labelling of abstract concepts with gendered words embeds prejudices within psychoanalysis. At the time Freud and Lacan were writing, the feminist critiques of structural misogyny hadn't happened. Moreover, Lacan apparently considered the basis of men's and women's sexuality to be fundamentally different, which apart from any other problems presupposes a strict gender binary. I presume subsequent psychoanalytic theorists have addressed this? Dammit, the problem with reading an introduction to a previously unknown field is that I now want to know more about it.

I suppose in that case this book can be said to have done its work. I feel much better informed about Lacan's life and work, I have learned some of the key terms he used, and there are various concepts which I didn't grasp but might with further research (such as the castration complex, 'not-all', and 'sinthome'). The book was quick to read and flowed well, probably because the cartoons and other imagery seemed better integrated into the text than was the case in 'Introducing Focault'. I particularly liked the illustration used for the concept of a circular square.
 
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annarchism | 7 other reviews | Aug 4, 2024 |
SINGING SCHOOL 9 BY 6
 
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vickila49 | Apr 16, 2024 |
A quick read that leaves Lacan still a mystery to me.
 
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yates9 | 7 other reviews | Feb 28, 2024 |
Excelent book. Thank you Darian Leader. Obrigado Vera Ribeiro pela tradução perfeita.
 
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darcimf | Mar 31, 2021 |
This was a helpful guide to considering how Western medicine has bifurcated the individual's experience of disease and illness from their understanding and experience of life. While it could've used a bit more focus, I appreciated the way so many common assumptions about the Western medical model were interrogated and the author's self-awareness to be open to the complexity of each person. What a task it is to care well for each other!
 
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b.masonjudy | Apr 3, 2020 |
This is an engaging text that helped me understand Lacanian theory, or at least gave me more words for it, but more importantly gives helpful context for Lacan's work. I didn't laugh but I could have, once, but I decided not to.
 
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b.masonjudy | 7 other reviews | Apr 3, 2020 |
The New Black is an engaging essay on the nature of mourning, melancholia, and the necessity of contextual knowledge in mental health treatment. I found some of Leader's points repetitive from a previous work but after finishing the book I did find them worth reiterating. Particularly, the strengths of psychoanalytic treatment and the real consequences of treating illness as an external invasion of the body.
 
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b.masonjudy | 1 other review | Apr 3, 2020 |
Leader's essay is his most concentrated and focus work I've read so far and he makes a compelling argument for maintaining the diagnostic category of manic-depressive. Truly, there is enough evidence to suggest that bipolar disorder is more helpful for prescribers than it is for patients suffering from mood dysregulation.
 
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b.masonjudy | 1 other review | Apr 3, 2020 |
Me parece que a teoria lacaniana é demasiado complexa para tudo que este livro quer abarcar, pois ele vai além do mero introducing e aborda temas que só quem se aprofundou na teoria tem acesso total de entendimento.
 
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Adriana_Scarpin | 7 other reviews | Jun 12, 2018 |
This series of books is heavy on illustrations, and does a good job of explaining complicated ideas while being fun, concise, and accurate. This one on Lacan provides a nice introduction to his some of his psychological theories, but due to the complexity of his ideas it is not quite as easy to follow as some other books in the series, so some sections benefit from re-reading.
One of Lacan's most influential theories is the "Mirror Stage" of child development, which answers a question posed by Freud. In addition to this, a lot of his other work expands upon Freud, so some familiarity with his writings is recommended before attempting Lacan. Apart from Freudian stuff, Lacan also had some interesting ideas on Language, and the use of symbolic logic in describing psychological and sociological theories, so there's really a lot of ideas packed into this short book. Lacan isn't the easiest thinker to get to grips with, but this intoduction does a good job of explaining his theories so that they can be understood by the general reader. Definitely recommended if you want to start learning about Lacan, but for those who haven't read much psychology then Freud would be a better starting place.
 
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P_S_Patrick | 7 other reviews | Mar 23, 2017 |
This book literally got me through grad school. After days and days of reading sentences of Lacan over and over in the hopes of understanding something, anything- even if it was wrong- this book came and created light out of darkness! Highly recommended to anyone studying Lacan!
 
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RubyA | 7 other reviews | Mar 30, 2013 |
Jacques Lacan (1901-1981) highly influential and hugely controversial French psychoanalyst and psychiatrist. Using methods from structural linguistics and topology he built on and developed further Freudian theory. This text gives a glimpse of Lacan’s ideas, their development over a lifetime and their roots with Freud and in his own clinical practice. Notwithstanding the title much remains obscure. That may be a good thing: over-simplification of complex ideas is no help to understanding. The text comes alive in the graphic images. It is enjoyable to follow even if getting lost at times. If this short outline tempts further study it has achieved its aim. (VIII-10)
 
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MeisterPfriem | 7 other reviews | Sep 19, 2010 |
 
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moricsala | Dec 4, 2007 |
Lacanian pop-psychology written in a slightly awkward style, Leader's book makes chafing generalisations but has more substance than its frequent blockbuster references might suggest.
1 vote
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stancarey | Jan 16, 2007 |
 
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HB-Library-159 | Oct 19, 2016 |
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