Introductory Teaching Seminar

Conducted by Florencia F.C. Shanahan

Fee: €30 (all three meetings)

via Zoom & in person if health recommendations allow it.

Sigmund Freud, who invented psychoanalysis, stated it is “the name 1) of a procedure for the investigation of mental processes which are almost inaccessible in any other way, (2) of a method (based upon that investigation) for the treatment of neurotic disorders and (3) of a collection of psychological information obtained along those lines, which is gradually being accumulated into a new scientific discipline.”[i]

Jacques Lacan defined psychoanalysis as a praxis, namely, “to treat the real by the symbolic,”[ii] and also as a discourse, a new form of “social bond.”[iii] The end of an analysis, both its logical ending and its aim, is determined by and accounts for what it produced in its experience.

In the Lacanian Orientation[iv], psychoanalysis is not psychotherapy. It is even the opposite to it. This does not mean that psychoanalysis is not applied in a variety of settings where its efficacy has been demonstrated. What is the mainspring of it? “What must there be in the analyst’s desire for it to operate in a correct way?”[v]

This seminar will explore the clinical implications of Lacan’s teaching in his ‘return to Freud’ and also in his going beyond.


NOTES

  1. Freud, S., Two Encyclopaedia Articles, 1922.
  2. Lacan, J., Seminar XI, The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis, 1964, p. 6.
  3. Lacan, J., Seminar XVII, The Other Side of Psychoanalysis, 1969.
  4. Miller, J.-A., The Lacanian Orientation. Teaching delivered at the University of Paris 8. 1981-2011.
  5. Lacan, J., Seminar XI, op. cit., p. 9.

READING

  • “Lay Analysis”, S. Freud
  • “True Psychoanalysis, and False”, J. Lacan
  • “Pure Psychoanalysis, Applied Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy”, J.-A. Miller