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Enric Berenguer

 

 

 

The city of Turin holds a specific signification for psychoanalysis in the Lacanian Orientation. It is not for nothing that Jacques-Alain Miller, during his speech at the Scientific Congress of the Lacanian School of Psychoanalysis (SLP) in formation on May 21, 2000, formulated there his Theory of Turin on the Subject of the School, a fundamental reference for us. And it is not for nothing that Jacques-Alain Miller chose Turin to celebrate, last July, the Seminar of Lacanian politics. Today it is a Forum that proposes a debate on a topic of the utmost political relevance, and about which psychoanalysts undoubtedly have a lot to say.


That Europe is at a crossroads does not escape anyone. If on the one hand we can once again hear rumors about the idea of reactivating the old project of the United States of Europe (Victor Hugo already mentioned this possibility in his speech at the Peace Congress in 1849 in Paris), on the other hand, there is an awakening of tensions, and the particularities which are capable of calling into question the very possibility of a common project are taking on more importance.


It is true that Europe, in the last twenty years, has been a distant reality more often experienced as an oppressive bureaucracy than as an area of democratic participation. On the other hand, as long as the very notion of democracy is under revision, as long as the idea of representation is in competition with more direct forms of immediate and continuous participation, as long as we do not know how they can fit within the framework of politics as we know it, what place is there for a transnational, translinguistic, transreligious community?

 

In recent times, where messages are coming to us from Catalonia and in particular Barcelona which raise concerns in more than one decision-making center, ELP members should feel particularly concerned by the Turin meeting, a beautiful city in which a singular chapter of European history was written.


Involved like so many other European (and Spanish) cities in the terrible Spanish Civil War, a decisive conflict for the configuration of modern Europe, the city of the Savoy had a very different destiny from that of Barcelona. While Turin, after its late compromise with the Great Alliance against the Bourbons, resisted the assault of the Franco-Spanish troops and forced them to retreat (1706), Barcelona fell as one of the last strongholds of the opposition (1714 ), even after the signing of the Treaty of Utrecht which, among other things, left the Rock of Gibraltar as an English enclave.

 

Turin is an excellent place to develop a current reflection on the meaning of a democratic Europe and the necessary compromise between the past, the present and a certain representation of a future to share. Even if the city continues to celebrate the defeat of French troops, written in the names of the streets dedicated to their heroes, the imprint of French culture is visible to anyone in many details of this Italian city that surprises us and always enchants us – in fact, the official language of the Court was French until the middle of the 19th century.


From the experience of the School as a set of exceptions, psychoanalysts have, perhaps, something to say about the treatment of differences and about an idea of democracy that does not slide towards the fragmentation specific to the time of the One-all-alone.

 

 

____________________________

 

 

Driven by Fear

 

Silvia Morrone

 

 

We are increasingly pervaded by a feeling of constant danger because of our proximity to an other about which we thought we knew everything but in fact knew nothing. The statistical data, which the capitalistic discourse rates so highly, no longer have any value. At the news that the work of those who come from other countries contributes to the maintenance of the self-proclaimed autochthonous people, a woman whispers, “I have worked my entire life, I cannot accept that my pension is paid by immigrants!”

 

Thanks to Freud, we have learned that, for the human being, that which frightened him is what was the most familiar to him: “What disturbs us is always something in which we do not find ourselves, so to speak.” This proximity to the other whose presence would cause the loss of our place in the world (it would seem to be a privilege of the few) risks veiling the condition of precariousness that is increasingly affecting everyone.

 

On 13 October, the Centro Psicoanalitico di Trattamento dei Malesseri Contemporanei (The Psychoanalytical Centre for Treatment of Contemporary Discontents) devoted a day of work to the theme “Fears Out-of-control – Individual and Collective Responses”, which revealed that the responses to these phenomena differ: isolation, charity, integration, hatred.

 

In any case, there where we think of acting legitimately, in order to know how to safeguard “our place”, but also to occupy the place of those who say “the other” what his place should be, we can verify, at an individual and collective level, that it is the exclusion of all difference that is produced.

 

A certain way of promoting democracy as equality, parity and identity – the theme of our Forum, “Determined Desires for Democracy in Europe” – does not diminish the increase in fears about which our governments mainly respond by increasing security measures, whose only result is an increase of those same fears.

 

Already, in 1950, Jacques Lacan recognised that in a civilisation in which the ideal of individualism has been raised to a degree of affirmation previously unknown, individuals have the tendency (or I would say, they are pushed) to think, feel, do and love exactly the same things, at the same time, in strictly equivalent spaces.

 

It would be precisely this “alienating identification” that forms the basis of the phenomena of “social assimilation”, which in turn would result in a situation where “the standardised aggressive tensions must rush wherever the crowd breaks up and polarises.”

 

For psychoanalysis, fear is already a response; we could almost say it is a resource for putting into words an increasingly generalised, and increasingly silent and anonymous anxiety, which is likely to fuel isolation and hatred. If it is true that psychoanalysis responds to the discontents of society by offering a “place of speech”, this has nothing in common with narrative, which is used so much in the psy-world and in politics.

 

What can make the difference is the meeting with those who are the recipients of that speech, without trying to “manipulate” it and reduce it to the social norm in order to gain a political or professional consensus, just as Lacan did on 19 March 1974 in his lesson of Seminar 21, Les non-dupes errent, calling psychoanalysts to the ethic of their position.

 

 

 

Translation reviewed by Janet and John Haney

 

 

 

 

 

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Your Money or Your Life 

Eugenio Díaz

 

 

I write this contribution to the open debate about the situation in Catalonia, and the political crisis, which is a crisis of the social bond that this situation shows us in a moment of maximum tension, maximum preoccupation, and maximum uncertainty.

Not long ago, at the 2015 Study Days of the ELP held in Barcelona under the title, Crisis – What the Psychoanalysts Have to Say, we learned and observed that crisis is something consubstantial with the human, and that “wanting to cure it can at times be the best way to feed this imperative and its devastating effects, if one does not first analyse the signifier that orders – in all senses of the word ‘order’ – this jouissance imposed in the name of the Good” (Bassols, 2015). I add, in reference to the current situation: in the name of an imposed jouissance of the Good that is supposedly the indissoluble unity, whether of the nation or the people.

Knowing this has not kept me from a feeling of collective disaster, which for that reason is personal. A jouissance of disaster that I do not want to be invaded by, which is why I am contributing this small idea to consider amongst many other ideas that have already been aired, diverse, discordant, and in the line of exploring the impossible, in order not to remain stuck in impotence and the observance of the push to the worse.

In Seminar XI, Jacques Lacan sets out, in relation to the operations of alienation and separation that cause the subject, the forced choice that is implied in the first of these. There, using a Witz that is almost visual, he indicates that in the choice between the money (the all, we could say) and life, one is forced to choose life, but in choosing it life can no longer be anything but restricted.

A loss is thus implied in this choice. Lacan then goes on to speak of a second operation, that of separation, which properly read also includes a loss, given that in this separare (se parere) what is at stake is a return to the primary alienation, but now in another modality (thus not without loss). There is no separation that does not imply a bond, a new bond. Without this separation we have the passage to the act.

This bond in common – Lacan will speak about this in various ways throughout his teaching – and is based in the solitude and the singularity of the sinthome. It is with this that one can make a community. Otherwise one is rather in the psychology of the masses.

Alienation and separation, by being thus holed, therefore include a loss, even though there is also something that is added: a new bond with the Other, an Other that is now barred, the fall of identifications, which had occupied the place of the “there is no”, of the “not-All”.

In the same chapters of Seminar XI, Lacan speaks about the choice of the slave, which is rather of the order of freedom or death. For the slave, the forced choice comes at the price of life, when life no longer has any value, one chooses life or death.

To return to the current situation, I thought that in the name of the all, that is, in believing that it is possible to have your money and your life – which is in a certain way the wager of those pushing for independence – one can lose one’s autonomy, which is a life of not-All, restricted, but at the end of the day still a life.

Saying that the wager of those in favour of independence is an all is a way of indicating the maximalist position to which those pressing for it have arrived. This involves, for example, equating the desire to decide, to separate, to become independent (about which there is nothing to say), with the right to decide (which in itself is questionable).

This maximalist position has been arrived at with the inestimable assistance of the government of Spain, which has not contributed any politics worthy of the name to this situation, but has rather acted in the manner of the Marx brothers “mas Madera es la Guerra”, as with the dreadful police actions of the 1st October, but also at many other moments in the course of the years.

It also occurred to me that in the staging of the independent position there has been a forcing. As someone more familiar with the matter said to me: it is a question of demonstrating the incurable of the Spanish State (even beyond the government) in order to justify that independence is the only possible way out. For our part let us not forget that the incurable, being more or less bearable depending on the subjectivities involved, is something for all, while not being completely reducible.

This forcing thus “logically” includes a decanting, a conversion of the forced choice of the subject into that of the slave, a conversion that is nothing but the rendering banal of the dignity of that choice, that of the true slave.

While I was writing this contribution, I heard a Councillor of the Generalitat say the following on the radio: “The Republic is no longer a choice, it is an absolute necessity for survival.” Thus when there is no choice, only “life or death” remains. Subtracting the subject from his forced choice leads to the banalisation of the choice between freedom and death. This choice is rendered banal in the same way and at the same time that applying a law without having previously included the politics that knows that “the unconscious is politics” has incalculable consequences for the social bond and for life.

 

Translation: Roger Litten

 

__________________________

 

 

Turin, a Wake-up Call 

Sergio Caretto

 

Democracy is not a condition, once and for all, of a guaranteed bond, and this is a fact that is found both in the past and in our times. Sometimes we fall asleep with the idea that those rights, acquired at the cost of hard battles fought by those who came before us, remain unaltered over time, which means that we forget the warning that, if I am not mistaken, Goethe left us: “Who falls asleep under democracy will wake up under dictatorship.” These are words of warning that alert us to not end up, almost without realizing it, deprived of those rights enjoyed under democracy.

And what if democracy today tends to make the subject sleep while dictatorship, on the contrary, makes him wake up? One wonders why democracy would foster a certain anesthesia of the subject – that same democracy that offers itself as a bond in which a blazing conflict can find a home, a conflict linked to desire as well as to the attempt to hold together different subjective positions that are sometimes very distant from each other. The fact that conflict and desire are inseparable was extremely clear to Freud, who learned from the analytical experience an unthinkable lesson, both then and now, of the symptom as resulting from the conflict between drive demands, which are not wholly absorbed by way of language, and the needs of civilisation, which impose a renunciation of the drive on the individual in exchange for a “plus” in terms of security. In this sense, the symptom, a formation of compromise, would be a democratic formation produced by the work of the subconscious, at the moment when it tries to come to terms with a jouissance that constantly comes back, in conformity with the modalities of its expulsion. After all, the analytic experience draws its politics from reducing the symptom to its hard core, and from leading the subject to the edge of that unclassifiable hole which provokes resolute desire as a possible response. In this sense, the politics of psychoanalysis is a politics of the not-all, an osso buco politics, to put it in terms of the Piedmontese culinary speciality. Analysis teaches us that taking responsibility for the jouissance that concerns us in our misery and division, rather than throwing it onto the Other, is a necessary condition for welcoming the other in his radical difference and dealing in a creative way with the conflict that this difference brings with it. Addressing what is produced in terms of symptom, as much at the level of the singular as at that of the collective, therefore becomes one of the conditions for making sure that the encounter with alterity does not simply produce hatred and rejection. In that sense, as psychoanalyst-psychoanalysand, we have the responsibility, in the cure as well as in the social discourse in which we live, to remember what Lacan affirms in the Proposition of 9th October 1967 on the Psychoanalyst of the School: There is a real at play in the formation of the psychoanalyst and this real tends to be misunderstood, as much at the level of the singular as at the level of the collective. This real, however, also pushes the analyst to incarnate, warily, the singular real in a cure, as in the collective discourse of which we are a part and which determines us. Jacques-Alain Miller, by his act, structurally “immondo”, impure, makes himself once again a cause of awakening; he shakes up the schools and the analysts to prevent them from falling asleep when faced with misunderstanding or the rejection of the real that is now at stake in the field of politics. Nowadays, these effects show themselves, in all their destructive power, in the field of politics, and they threaten that form of connection that we call democracy. Effects, like the purloined letter, which are so clear as to be invisible.

The question I ask myself is: is it the case that in democracy, today more than yesterday, we are asleep, since jouissance, under the empire in which we “live”, inhibits the conflictual dimension? I remember a Rosa Elena Manzetti intervention in which, several years ago, she highlighted a particular way for the contemporary subject to be phobic in relation to the dimension of conflict. The avoidance of conflict is nowadays facilitated by the possibility of establishing relationships in the absence of bodies, and by the illusion that it is enough to press a button to avoid meeting the other, where both misunderstanding and conflict manifest themselves on the horizon. However, does a democracy which backs away when confronted with conflict not reduce itself to an empty shape and the bureaucratic exercise of power? Does it not reduce itself to a democracy of statements that actually collapses as soon as it confronts the singular speech of each individual? Hannah Arendt explicitly highlighted the connection between a blind and apparently neutral bureaucratisation and the advent of totalitarianism.

The Turin Forum will be my opportunity to verify how much the speech of each person would provoke the speech of the other, and then another, in noting thus, during the act, that democracy is this field of desire, never guaranteed, which is achieved on the basis of the effects of a speech which takes form, and that therefore gives way to the singularity of the subject, be it individual or collective, rather than expelling it along the path of the concentration camp, which is constantly on the horizon. The Turin Forum is a wake-up call. We await you in Turin with its “Theory of the Subject of the School”[1], its galleries, its chocolate liqueur (bicerin), its osso buco and its lalangue.

 

Translated by Caterina Tropini

Reviewed by Janet and John Haney

 

 

 



[1] Miller, J.-A., “The Turin Theory of the Subject of the School”, May 2000, can be consulted at http://londonsociety-nls.org.uk/index.php?file=The-School/The-Turin-Theory-of-the-Subject-of-the-School-Jacques-Alain-Miller.html

 
 
 
 

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Democracy? Definitely! But What Kind?

 

Pierre-Gilles Guéguen

 

 

Why do Psychoanalysts have a strong desire for democracy?

 

We will first of all reply that it regards the very existence of psychoanalysis, and its concrete and practical possibility.

 

The psychoanalytic discourse, before any other discourse, orients the act of those who merit being called psychoanalysts, because it is in their view the only one capable of subverting bio-politics, which was so rightly denounced by Michel Foucault. Before being a profession, the practice of psychoanalysis necessitates, amongst other things, a personal analysis, namely to have put ones analysis and the encounter with the real before all other mundane considerations.

 

In a political system where freedom of speech is gagged, which is since Hannah Arendt designated as “totalitarian”, there is no possibility of practice of that which, since Freud, we call psychoanalysis, this singular meeting of two, outside of any norm or conformism. The analysand tracks down the truth of his jouissance there, and the extent of the demand of the master discourse. What is revealed to him in his cure is the part he takes in the master discourse, but also that there is an impossible in him to conform to it. A psychoanalysis is not achieved in communion with the unconscious, and Lacan recommended that one guarded against “preferring the unconscious over all else”. Rather, for each one it is achieved by extracting the relationship to the Other, which singularises and objects to what is good for all. One does this by the exploration of this singular concretisation of language that is each one’s symptom. Per via de levare, as Freud said.

 

Political systems that we would call democratic are those that permit and favour multiplicity of opinion and modes of enjoyment, and which organise their confrontations through different modalities of intervention, accepted by the whole of the social body. This way they assure beyond the inherent fracture in discord, for a unity of the people to exist.

In fact we speak of political systems with parliamentary representation, linked to nation states as they functioned since the 19th century in Europe and on the American continent (with long breaks in certain Latin American countries).

 

When today we say that there is a decided desire for democracy, we must also ask ourselves in what kind of democracy psychoanalysis of the Lacanian orientation can exist and prosper. In some countries psychoanalysis has spread, in others (England, Germany, USA, not to mention middle Eastern countries) it struggles to establish itself. Freud was the first to realise this with regard to the USA.

 

Marcel Gauchet[1], political scientist who often refers to Lacan, reminds us that at the beginning of the 21st century, democracy and its exercise have evolved from the 20th century. The kernel of a so-called democratic society supposes the respect of the rule of law to guarantee fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression, the separation of religious beliefs and the exercise of power (the model of the secular republic, less granted in countries like the USA, for example). This exercise supposes also that “governance” is organised along the principles of the separation of legislative, executive and judicial powers. Gauchet remarks that at the end of the century an essential factor of this evolution was the taking into account of the Rights of Man, illustrated by the development of NGOs and the advance of the “right of influence” over areas of other states. According to Gauchet, this taking into account has reconciled the regimes that we consider democratic with the ideal of the French revolution, ideal of equality contained in the declaration of the Rights of Man, but it has at the same time undermined the consistency of democratic regimes and thus nation states, through the introduction of supposedly universal values.

 

Since the beginning of the 21st century, other phenomena and beliefs have contributed to the weakening of democracies and their power to overcome the divergences between its citizens through political conversation: The neo-liberal model of economy replaces political action everywhere, and managerial methods tend to take the place of the ideal politician in the service of the state. Standardised and generalised evaluation methods weaken and impoverish the specific content of politics while contractual law imported from Anglo-Saxon thinking, extends to everything. The ultra financialised economy and the phenomenon of numerical globalisation manage to undermine democratic forms of nation states by propagating a thinking “for all” and the expansion of standardising capitalism, which erodes the specificity of cultures and the difference between peoples. Paradoxically, this standardisation of political thinking produces anxiety that sparks the reflex towards identity politics (United Kingdom, Catalonia), always benefitting communalism.

 

Two interventions by Lacan come to mind on this theme: One dates from 1967 and is in the “Proposition of the 9th October 1967 on the Psychoanalyst of the School”[1]: “Our future as common markets will be balanced by an increasingly hard-line extension of the process of segregation.”[2]

 

The other is in Television: “ … more than once I’ve seen hope – what they call bright new tomorrows – drive people I’ve valued as much as I value you to kill themselves, period.[3]

We cannot say that we haven’t been warned.

 

 

Translated by Natalie Wulfing 



[1] Gauchet, M., La démocratie contre elle-même, coll. Tel, Gallimard, Paris, 2002.

[2] Lacan, J., “Proposition of 9 October 1967”, http://londonsociety-nls.org.uk/index.php?file=The-School/The-Proposition-of-the-Ninth-of-October-1967-Jacques-Lacan.html  (Fr: Autres écrits, coll. Le Champ Freudien, Seuil, Paris, 2001, p. 257.)

[3] Lacan, J., Television, Norton, 1990, p. 43 (Fr: “Télévision”, ibid., p. 542).

 

 

 

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RADIO LACAN

No. 211


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London Society

Laboratory for Lacanian Politics in the UK

London

11th November 2017
After our successful launch of LLP last summer, we are now beginning a series of seminars, the first of which will explore the lures and logic of contemporary political discourse. Organisers: Roger Litten and Bogdan Wolf.



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RADIO LACAN

No. 210

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New Incarnations of the Desire for Democracy in Europe

 

Éric Laurent

 

 

Parliamentary democracy in Europe is running at full speed. Everywhere there are elections, promises of elections, referendums, promises of referendum. From the outset, it is important to note the difference in signification between elections and referendums, although both are part of the arsenal of the rule of law. In one case the emphasis is on parliamentary representation, in the other the call to the voice of a people is highlighted. Does the rule of law manage to treat the passions that are burning?

 

Europe and its representative democracies

 

Let us look at the latest twists and turns. At the end of September, during the German elections, the AfD, the identitarian party, of the populist extreme right, scored 13% of the vote. The most powerful head of state in Europe, Mrs Merkel, who was a favourite despite being at the end of a three-term roll, was paralysed. Several months of negotiations ensued. Germany will not be governed until January 2018, and it is unclear what the “Jamaica” coalition will be able to find in common. It is not enough to vote, the results of the votes must also be implemented. On the other side of the North Sea, on the Brexit post-referendum side, things are not improving, “The tone is turning sour between London and Brussels. A few weeks ago, Europeans and Britons were still hoping to ratify the move to a second phase of the Brexit negotiations on the ‘future relationship’, including trade, at the Council of European leaders on Thursday 19 and Friday 20 October. It was not to be. The 27 should follow the recommendation of Michel Barnier, their chief negotiator, and note the lack of ‘sufficient progress’ in discussions on divorce with the United Kingdom. And no way will a green light be given to the two-year transition period, demanded by the British Prime Minister, Theresa May, during her speech in Florence (Italy), on September 22.” [1] Meanwhile the British are keeping count of what for the past five years they have called “hate crimes”, aggressions motivated by racial motives, religion, sexual orientation, or disability. The category is new and comprises, for 80% of the tally, aggressions with racial overtones. They usually increase after terrorist attacks, but it should be noted that they peaked after the Brexit referendum. [2]

 

Let us return to a country that depends, to a large extent, on the German productive machine for its prosperity. “The Austrians voted on Sunday, October 15, to renew their Parliament in early elections brought by the Conservative (ÖVP) Sebastian Kurz after he took the leadership of his party in May. He came first following a campaign dominated by the themes of immigration and the integration of Muslim refugees. This young 31 year-old man, who experienced a meteoric rise, must now start negotiations with the Social Democrats (SPÖ) who came second, and the Eurosceptic far right (FPÖ), who came third. In 2000, Austria had been the first member state of the European Union to bring a far-right party to government, which earned it European sanctions.” [3] The elections are clearly marked by the rejection of immigrants, although the economic situation of Austria is at its best. “The growth forecasts of the country: it could reach 2.8% in 2017 and 2018. We must go back to the mid-2000s to find a comparable performance, 0.8 % higher than the rest of the euro zone … Austrians also maintain a standard of living among the highest in the world: in 2016, per capita gross domestic product (GDP) stood at 40,420 euros, in this mostly Alpine country, with exemplary infrastructure, and more prosperous than neighbouring Germany, the economic giant from which it derives most of its activity. A large part of the Austrian economy depends on orders from the major German groups.” [4] Prosperity, as we can see, does not prevent rejection. Austria has its Green President, but it is not he who will be in charge.

 

In the same style, and in the same area, elections were held this weekend in the Czech Republic, a small rich and egalitarian country, especially since it got rid of poor Slovakia (partitioned in 1993). It made Vaclav Havel sick. “With insolent economic health indicators – unemployment the lowest in Europe at 3.3%, sound public finances, small inequalities – the Czech legislative elections of Friday 20 and Saturday 21 October should have been a mere formality for the Social Democrat Party (CSSD), in power since 2014. But the anti-system protest wave that washes over Europe did not spare Prague: the CSSD does not dare to hope for more than 15% of votes, as it was steamrolled in the polls by the phenomenon of Andrej Babis, the flamboyant populist leader. Having the second largest Czech fortune and being the country’s leading employer, at the head of the behemoth Agrofert, a financial institution of more than 200 companies operating in agribusiness and petrochemicals, Mr. Babis began his political rise in 2011 by creating a party with an evocative name, the Action of Disgruntled Citizens (ANO).” [5] The fact that he is accused by Europe of massive embezzlement has only increased his popularity and his lead. The ex-communist countries produce decidedly strange oligarchs. He is known as the Czech Trump, we’d better say: the Czech Ryboloviev. [6]

 

Let’s leave Germany and its backyard to go to southern Europe. This Sunday, a legal and consultative referendum was held, in Veneto and Lombardy at the initiative of the Northern League, without a lot of apparent passions. Voters must say whether they are in favour of “additional forms and special conditions of autonomy”. 50% of voters are expected to turn out in Veneto. The date of October 22 is symbolic. It refers to October 22 1886, when Lombardy and Veneto joined the Kingdom of Italy. The new Mayor of Milan, Giuseppe Sala will vote yes. More classical, the great figure of Massimo d’Alema came from Mestre to denounce a useless referendum. The founder of the independentist Venetian party, the lawyer Alessio Morosin, wants to sound a more disturbing note and make the seriousness of the case heard: “The problem of this election is fear. Abstainers are afraid to hear the people.”[7]

 

Austria and the Czech Republic have a weak desire for democracy, and a strong desire for populism. Germany, Brexit, Italy encounter difficulties with democracy, and desire has a hard time finding a way in. In all these cases, the fear of migrants is highlighted. They are not the same. In Germany, they are the million Syrians welcomed by Mrs Merkel, in England the Poles welcomed by the market. In Italy, the anxiety of Lampedusa is gaining ground, but the Vatican is watching! In the Czech Republic, where there are no migrants, and in the former GDR where there are few, it is the pure fear of the non-existent migrant.

 

Hello to Catalonia!

 

And then there is Catalonia. Hello to Catalonia! It is a tragedy that breaks the heart of Europe and depresses its bureaucracy. Some of its members could rejoice in private at Brexit, exasperated by the British way of preventing management to go unchallenged with their “I want my money back”. But the allusive propositions of the Catalan separatists left them cold, and even petrified. The French President was allowed to say aloud what everyone was thinking. Nobody wants to touch to International Law and the borders of the States of Europe, a Law which is at present so fragile, so humiliated, since Putin’s show of force in Crimea. Nobody wants, either, to get entangled in the bureaucratic concerto of a state the size of Greece with financial debt problems as impossible to solve as the calculation of the bill that the British will have to pay. The latest appeal of Carles Puigdemont on Saturday October 21, in the English transmission of his speech convening the Catalan Parliament, will likewise be ignored. Spanish nationalism and its immobile right are not more welcome in the European arena. The compromise drafted by the PSOE passed by the Catalan Parliament with the mixed support of autonomists and socialists has been blocked since 2010 in the name of the One-Spain, which is not without evoking the demons of Franquism. Moreover, the right was savvy enough to ally with the new PSOE and the new force of Ciudadanos to face separatist stubbornness in the name of the unity of the Spanish state. The separatists took advantage of the difficulties of the aftermath of the 2008 economic crisis to blame every problem on the state. One thing led to another, and from elections to demonstrations, we came to the illegal referendum of October 1. The use of disproportionate force and police violence against a largely middleclass population, going to vote, has rightly outraged Europe, and allowed the separatists to push further. But then the fairy tale, which sustained the ardour of the militants, in spite of the obvious unpreparedness of the next move, was exposed. In a week, 800 corporate headquarters, it is said, although the figures are not published so as not to cause panic, and the three big banks, have sheltered from financial and monetary uncertainty. The employers’ organisations in Catalonia have been quietly lobbying. There is, of course, a gap between exporting industries and small businesses dependent on the local market (260,000 small and medium-sized enterprises in Catalonia), but still! The warning signals have been sent. “Citizen cash withdrawals” only precipitate the problem. No reasonable Catalan will want to share the fate that Argentina suffered from the corralito of 2001. Let’s not talk about the wishes for a referendum in Val d’Aran which, as a Catalan territory, takes its planes and religion from Toulouse, nor about the difficulties of the Catalan food agriculture with the Andalusian tomato. Just as with Brexit, the industrial zones of Europe discover that cucumbers and tomatoes all come from the same place: Andalusia, with its flaws, its subsidies, its immigrant workers without documents, the gypsy district of Granada since the Reconquista etc. Vegans are all behind Andalusia! Will the organic question and the financial question calm minds as in France the exit from the Euro frightened far-right voters, so resistant to other arguments, especially ecological arguments? Globalised capitalism, of which we rightfully complain, also softens manners, at least the manners of those who have something to lose – Catalan pensioners being in this category. We will return to the issue of loss a bit later.

 

Let’s add a question of importance. Who will support civil peace? Is there, or isn’t there, a split within the Mossos d’Esquadra, the autonomous Catalan police officers who were the heroes of last summer’s attacks? Nobody has forgotten the determination of this policewoman who shot down without fail those who threatened her and her citizens in Cambrils. Part of this autonomous police has clearly seceded from Spain during the demonstrations of September 20 and the referendum of October 1. But the unity of this institution, ancient in its name dating back to the eighteenth century, but young, (born in 1990), in its new incarnation, is not guaranteed. The touchstone will be in the evolution of the next days. [8]

 

I write in an uncertain time. The Rajoy government, on Saturday October 21, decided to apply Article 155 of the Spanish Constitution and, in the name of the constitutional rule of law, wants to regain control over Catalan Autonomy. Puigdemont is relying on street demonstrations, with its English signs Freedom for Catalonia, and the mistakes that the Guardia Civil will commit, to move Europe and put Rajoy under watch. The clumsiness and isolation of the latter in the European summits does not bode well. On the side of the street, as Melenchon would say in France, it is the most determined who occupy it, militant virtues have a part to play, but they do not decide everything. Fragile International Law, the power of the financial argument, the loyalty of the forces of repression, and of community police, to a master signifier, will weigh just as heavily in the coming days. Miquel Bassols aptly opposes the Catalan symptom and the identitarian principle, but there is clearly a non-identitarian principle at work. The Catalans, even if they are not separatists, have a hard time recognising themselves in Spain. They have no Spanish symptoms. Even those who have an Andalusian grandfather who has come to look for work in the northern metropolis struggle. In Madrid, it’s different. Some democrats recognise themselves in a certain national narration. Their voices are not easily transmitted. A symptom of that is that the strongest voice during the anti-independence demonstrations in Barcelona was the Peruvian Marquis, the liberal Mario Vargas-Llosa.

 

Ana Colau, the mayor of Barcelona, has managed to find an original position. She indicated that she was not for the declaration of independence, and did not participate in the demonstrations that carried this statement. But on Saturday the 21st, she denounced “the most terrible day of the last forty years” and asked the Catalan PSOE “not to support the decision of Madrid to suspend Catalan autonomy.” [9] Ms. Colau does not identify with mass camps. She is heretical and supports a determined desire for democracy. She speaks in the ears of analysands, who are all torn, upset, making clear the justness of Lacan’s statement according to which “the Unconscious is politics”, with the consequences that Jacques-Alain Miller was able to extract. [10] Be that as it may, the Forum of November 18 will be held in the midst of a fertile moment of the desire for democracy in Europe.

 

The desire for democracy and populism

 

Democracy is the ability to bear all these contradictions without being overwhelmed or depressed. It is wanting the debate, and putting the balance of power into words. This is not the only force, but it is to take it into account, by wanting to exceed it. That is why we dare to talk about the desire for democracy when we are constantly being told about the desire for populism. The meaning of title of our Forum is not obvious. How can we speak of a determined desire for democracy, when the word “democracy” comes to name a loss and an impossible? If we limit ourselves to looking at France, whether we look at Marcel Gauchet, Raphael Glucksmann, Jean-Claude Milner, Jacques Rancière, Paul Ricoeur, we see that they who have nothing in common, especially not a political idea, agree on one point. Democracy is the mourning of the One. Populism is the enthusiasm for hegemony, for the restoration of the One.

 

Marcel Gauchet, in his book Democracy Against Itself, stated that, “This is what politics specifically consists of: it is the place of a fracture of reality”. Yet this phrase was stated at the time of the euphoria of democracies, after the collapse of the Berlin Wall. Thirteen years later, Tony Blair spoke in a darker atmosphere. In 2014, he gave a series of lectures entitled “Is Democracy Dead?” Marcel Gauchet [11] had already emphasised that the triumph of democracies did not engender any enthusiasm and rather a certain depressive affect, although it may have been lighter than today. He saw the cause in the fact that in a democracy truth is never again one, that it is divided into contrary opinions.

 

Raphael Glucksmann, whose father I knew when he ran the film club at HEC, with Jean-Jacques Brochier, before the development of his work, and later in the “events of 68”, sees in the Catalan moment that we are going through the reminder of the tragic origin of political democracy, and the need to cross limitless discord. He formulates the dilemma with his usual talent with the pen: “This transcendence of tragedy in politics is told by Aeschylus’ Oresteia, our original and common story – that of the advent of Athens when the Erinyes, the goddesses of an endless and limitless discord, transform themselves into Eumenides and take their place in the heart of the city, giving birth on stage to the first democracy in history … In Catalonia, two legitimacies oppose each other. The right of a people to self-determination and the right of a State to enforce the law. The independentists, secure in the justness of their cause, played the card of the illegal fait accompli. The central government, secure in the justness of its cause, played the card of legal repression. The actions of both reinforce the certainty of the other to be ‘right’. The ingredients of a tragedy are there. How could we not condemn the shameful beatings of peaceful citizens, armed with a simple ballot? How could we not see that a self-proclaimed independence would open a Pandora’s box, that of the borders within the EU, a box that centuries of nationalist massacres had managed to close?”[12]. The only solution he sees is in an appeal to a desire for democracy, what he calls “politics as the only horizon”.

 

Paul Ricœur, Emmanuel Macron’s mentor, we are told, emphasises politics as the place of mourning, of renunciation to the identity of the political subject. Non-existent identity must give way to narrative identity, a notion that owes much to the subject, according to Lacan. The non-recognition of Ricœur’s complex debts to Lacan had, in their time, provoked the anger of our master. As to narrative identity, it was produced after the death of Lacan, but Lacanians will recognise familiar accents. “This notion, which appears for the first time in Ricœur’s work in the conclusion of Temps et récit (Seuil, 1983-1985), is based on the idea that every individual appropriates, or even constitutes himself, in an incessantly renewed narrative of self. It is not an objective story, but that which, as writer and reader of my own life, ‘I’ tell myself about myself. Personal identity is thus formed through the narrations it produces and those it continuously incorporates. In doing so, far from being frozen in a hard core, the ‘I’ is transformed through its own stories but also through those that are transmitted by tradition or literature that are grafted into it, continuously restructuring the whole of personal history.” [13] The “punctual and vanishing” subject, as Lacan said, which cannot be defined by an essence or a fixed homeostasis, can only be articulated with the signifying chain, with what can be described as narrative history. But what, in Lacan, is above all logical existence [14], remains in Ricœur, a reader of the first Lacan like Habermas, historical existence: “Without the help of narration, the problem of personal identity is indeed doomed to an antinomy without solution: either one poses a subject identical to itself in the diversity of its states, or one holds, following Hume and Nietzsche, that this identical subject is only a substantialist illusion, the elimination of which reveals only a pure variety of cognitions, emotions, volitions. The dilemma disappears if, to the identity understood in the sense of the same (idem), one substitutes the identity understood in the sense of oneself (ipse); the difference between idem and ipse is none other than the difference between a substantial or formal identity and narrative identity.” [15] This is what allows François Dosse to emphasise that Emmanuel Macron is trying to give France a narrative story in motion, one that would allow a future vision to emerge, by shaking some pillars of the conservative narrative story: “Emmanuel Macron gives a definition of France which refers to an incessant narrative construction and not, as some have said, to the simple revival of the Lavissian national novel glorifying the heroes of an epic.”[16]. We must therefore want to tolerate the mourning of identity and desire this reworking constantly carried out by the Other who speaks in us, leaving a margin for the invention of ipse.

 

We leave aside the question of the articulation of the subject and jouissance, in the fantasy and its passions because I have spoken of them elsewhere. “Why is it that from Erdogan to Putin, to Xi Jin Ping, and through the crisis of the European democracies, we see a series of very different leaders emerge, but who have in common the trait of directing alone or of wanting to do it by differentiating themselves from the system. This word, system, is a screen to designate representative democracy in its multiple. This series of leaders can be considered not from a supposedly unified class under the label populism, but by considering in its diversity the type of fantasy they propose to share, by considering what jouissance is in play, what the body event is that is proposed by each. One could thus consider the series of leaders called populists without putting them all in the same bag, despite the fact that they arise everywhere, in all parts of the planet, in very different political regimes; they don’t shy away from relying on tradition and the Name-of-the-Father, but in order to make do without it.”[17]

 

Jacques Rancière also underlines the mourning of the One at the heart of the desire for democracy. “The democratic scandal is simply to reveal this: there will never be, under the name of politics, one principle of the community, legitimising the action of the rulers on the basis of the laws inherent in the gathering of human communities. Rousseau was right to denounce the vicious circle of Hobbes, who claims to prove the natural unsociability of men by taking court intrigues and the scandal of salons as examples. But in describing nature according to society, Hobbes also showed that it is futile to seek the origin of the political community in some innate virtue of sociability.”[18] This is what populism seeks, the innate virtue of identity that would abolish irremediable discord and make of the Hegemonic One the new law of the heart of the people.

 

The desire for democracy and migrants as a symptom

 

Elections in the Czech Republic and Austria have once again highlighted the break between Eastern and Western Europe. We remember how the Bush administration used it by speaking of a new Europe to designate this newly admitted East to the enlargement to twenty-seven of the EU. The 27 started by rejecting this view, but since the waves of migrants travelling on the Balkan roads in the summer of 2015, and the closures of the borders of Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia, provoking Mrs Merkel’s welcome declaration, they have accepted the obvious conclusion. A new curtain of lead has fallen, separating the two Europes. In the West a powerful security filter has been set up, allowing an inter-state collaboration which was at first defeated by the multiple attacks sponsored by Daesh, then gradually became more effective in stopping the slaughter, although all of Europe continues to thwart multiple attacks each month. The fight against the fallen Caliphate does not stop with the fall of Raqqa, and as Althusser said, “The Future Lasts a Long Time”.

 

Two years have passed, with unexpected twists and turns. Germany, which unlike Austria had been denazified, has nonetheless had to live with the electoral rise of AfD, and Bulgarian political scientist Ivan Krastev gives voice to the point of view of Eastern Europe in a heterodox way, on the question of refugees, be they from civil wars in the Balkans, civil wars in the Middle East, or newcomers from sub-Saharan Africa. He gives human form to the terrible figures in question. In Syria alone, 7 million people have left the country out of a total of 22 million. Only a million and a half have reached Europe, the most qualified. For Krastev, irrespective of the differences in economic status, migrants are the “damned of the earth who, because of globalisation, change country since they cannot change their government. It is a rational decision. As predicted by Raymond Aron, “inequality between peoples takes on the meaning that class inequality used to have”.[19] He gives a version of the opposition between the good reception of refugees in Germany in 2015 and the rejection of the “Visegrad Group”. “The speed with which Germany embraced cosmopolitan values ​​was also a way for her to escape the xenophobic legacy of Nazism, while the anti-cosmopolitanism prevalent in Central Europe is partly rooted in an aversion to the internationalism formerly imposed by communism.”[20] On the other hand, it gives a parallel status to the refugee crisis, and to the lack of trust of populations towards their elites, making an explanatory link between rejection of the foreigner and rejection of the democratic division. “If many Europeans vote for populist parties, it is not only because of the refugee crisis, but also because, for several years now, they no longer trust their elites … Now, the ‘ever closer’ union between Europeans and ‘deepened democracy’ have become two antinomic notions, Krastev acknowledges.”[21] Europe is divided in the East and the European narrative of a unity re-found beyond the Iron Curtain collapses. Eastern Europe does not have the same history as that of the West in its relation to the Balkans and the Ottoman Empire. After all, the last siege of Vienna dates back to 1683 and we are waiting for a really nice novel or film to teach Europe what happened.

 

Our time is one of wars between dysfunctional or bankrupt states, other wars led by wounded hyper-powers, or wars of religion, all wars that send millions of migrants on the roads of exile. The issue of migrants is at the forefront of the rights issue. Some, like Giorgio Agamben, see it as the proof of the end of liberal parliamentary democracy, replaced by the permanent state of exception declaring that he who is no longer a citizen of anywhere is deprived of rights. Basing himself on Roman law, he sees in the migrant the actualisation of the figure of the banished, the homo sacer. [22] On the contrary, Jean-Claude Milner shows that this question of the migrant, of the one who is no longer a citizen, renews the reading of the rights of man and citizen. Let’s follow his reasoning. Before asking the question of power, and before asking the question of the rights of the citizen, the Revolution poses the rights of man as such. Faced with critics who denounced the abstraction of this man, or, as in the Marxist tradition, his too clear embodiment of the ideal rights of the bourgeois, Milner maintains that these rights are perfectly embodied as the rights of the speaking being seized in his pure quality as speaking being. “Speaking beings are speaking bodies. Speaking beings are many because they have bodies.”[23] And this reduction announces the sexuated speaking being of Freudianism, highlighted by the last teaching of Lacan under the name of the parlêtre who has a body. “If we think about it properly, the man of the Declaration announces the man/woman of Freudianism: unlike the man of religions and philosophies, he is neither created nor inferred, he is born; this is what his real amounts to.”[24]

 

The Marxist objection to the abstraction of rights loses its consistency in the face of the increase in emergency situations and ill treatments: “Faced with refugee camps, Marxist language is frivolous. So rights would start with excrements and secretions? Why not, Freud would have asked. […] The rights of man/woman summarise what makes one not treat a man or a woman as an animal; they therefore begin closest to animal life. Even when individuals have been deprived of their merits and demerits, their innocent or guilty actions, their works in a word, what remains has rights. Rag, garbage, tomb, most religions, philosophies and heroisms despise this accursed share.” [25]

 

If we accept that the rights of the parlêtre cover the taking into account of the accursed share thus formulated, we can go as far as to think that the rights of man make us understand that the rights of migrants imply those of the parlêtre. At the end of Seminar XXIII, Lacan substitutes the exile of bodies in history to the ex-sistence of the subject of the unconscious: “Joyce rejects that anything can happen in what the history of historians is supposed to take for its object. He’s quite right, history being nothing more than a flight, none of which is told but the exoduses. Through his exile, he sanctions the seriousness of his judgment. Deportees alone take part in history: since man’s got a body, it’s by the body that he can be got. The flipside of habeas corpus. Reread history: this is all the truth to be read in it. Those who believe they stand for a cause in its hullabaloo are also misplaced without doubt by an exile they have deliberated, but in making themselves an escabeau they are struck havisionless.” [26]

 

We can deduce, from this, not only a politics of rights, but also a politics of the symptom, which implies new desires for democracy. The misrecognition of the migrant symptom goes by way of the affirmation of populist communitarianism, with its narcissistic withdrawal. Faced with the narcissistic identification with the same, with communitarian identification, the politics of the symptom aims at the partner to be deciphered. Identitarian belief carries the germ of its madness, including in the logical form according to which “I hasten to identify with the same lest they do not recognise me as a man”. Migrants are neither reducible to a “desire for the West” which would alienate them without remedies, nor to the opaque figure of a menacing crowd, reduced to mere numbers. They are case by case. To decipher the migrant symptom is to be able to treat it effectively. A little Realpolitik is necessary. Faced with the millions of migrants expected, we will have to build filters and humanitarian reception areas in the countries of departure. We will therefore have to improve the beginnings of the new policy put into place since this year by the French and Italians who are in the front line. The universal of the human right must always be measured on a case-by-case basis with the multiple possible forms of immigrations trafficking. Pope Francis was able to find the words to be the voice of a new figure of the neighbour. He is making a powerful contribution to Italy’s admirable resistance faced with the difficulties of hosting new waves of migration, particularly those from sub-Saharan Africa. The incidents of the summer in Rome left traces, but they were overcome. We will hear what will come next in Turin in November and Rome in February.

 

 

Translated by Alasdair Duncan

Revised by Véronique Voruz

 

 

[1] Ducourtieux C. and Bernard P., “Brexit, the Puzzle Ahead of the European Summit”, Le Monde, 19 October 2017.

[2] Travis A., “Hate Crime Surged in England and Wales After Terrorist Attacks”, The Guardian, October 17, 2017.

[3] “In Austria, the Extreme Right in Ambush”, Le Monde, 17 October 2017.

[4] “Austria Approaches the Parliamentary Elections in Insolent Shape”, Le Monde, October 15, 2017.

[5] Vitkine, B., “Andrej Babis, Populist Billionaire to Conquer Power in the Czech Republic”, Le Monde, 20 October 2017.

[6] See the article of the now famous duo Gérard Davet and Fabrice Lhomme in Le Monde of September 14, 2017.

[7] Connan, J., “Veneto, Lombardy: In Northern Italy, the Other Referendum”, Le Figaro online, checked on October 20, 2017.

[8] On all these questions, read the excellent articles on the blog of our Forum, as well as those of Zadig-España, Rosa Elena Manzetti, Ana Aromi, Miquel Bassols, Enric Berenguer, Paolo Bolgiani, Joaquim Carretti, Gustavo Dessal, Santiago Castellanos, Domenico Cosenza, Francesc Vila, and those whom I cannot mention in their extension. Many will be present at the Turin Forum. The discussion will be exciting.

[9] Piquer, I., “Force Demonstration of the Catalan Separatists in the Streets of Barcelona, ​​La Matinale du Monde of October 22nd.

[10] Miller J.-A., Course of May 15, 2002, unpublished.

[11] Gauchet, M., La démocratie contre elle-même, Paris, Gallimard, 2002, p. 192.

[12] Glucksmann, R., “Catalonia: Politics as the Only Horizon”; L’Obs, October 12, 2017.

[13] Arrien, S.-A., “Ricoeur and Narrative Identity”, Le Point, July 21, 2017.

[14] Miller, J.-A., L’être et l’Un, 2010-2011 Course, unpublished.

[15] Arrien, S.-A., “Ricoeur and Narrative Identity”, Le Point, July 21, 2017.

[16] Flandrin, A., “How Emmanuel Macron Placed Paul Ricoeur in Power”, Le Monde, 19 October 2017.

[17] Laurent, É., “Populismo y acontecimiento del cuerpo”, Lacan Quotidien, May 10, 2017.

[18] Rancière, J., La haine de la démocratie, La fabrique éditions, 2005, p. 58.

[19] Lemaître, F., “Europe on the Way to the Abyss” (On the Destiny of Europe, by Ivan Krastev, Premier Parallèle editions, 2017), Le Monde, 11 October 2017.

[20] Ibid.

[21] Ibid.

[22] Agamben, G., Homo sacer, Threshold, 2003.

[23] Milner, J.-C., Relire la Révolution, Verdier editions, 2016, p. 254

[24] Ibid., p. 263.

[25] Ibid., p. 261.

[26] Lacan, J., “Joyce the Symptom”, in Autres écrits, Seuil, 2001, p. 568, English translation A. R. Price, in The Lacanian Review issue 5, forthcoming.

 

 

 

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NLS-Press n° 34 – November / novembre 2017

Activités des sociétés et groupes de la NLS

Activities of the Societies and Groups of the NLS

November / novembre 2017

ASREEP-NLS (Suisse)

  • 1 novembre

Aigle

Séminaire cartellisant : Lecture du séminaire de Jacques-Alain Miller,        « L'Un tout seul », (2011). Responsable Jacqueline Nanchen.

  • 14 novembre

Fribourg

Laboratoire du CIEN : Enfants violents et le CIEN dans la cité.  Responsable : Violaine Clément.

  • 14 november

Genève

Séminaire d'introduction à la psychanalyse d'orientation lacanienne.

Responsables : Beatriz Premazzi, Sofia Guaraguara, Anne Edan, Ludovic Bornand.

  • 15 novembre

Martigny

Atelier de criminologie.

Responsable : René Raggenbass
.

London Society-NLS (United Kingdom)

  • 1st November

London

Lacanian Lessons 2017-2018, “Identifications, Desire, Discourse In and Out of the Clinic”.

The new series of Lacanian Lessons for 2017-2018, which will take place once a month on Wednesday evenings at Conway Hall, will explore the place of identification in discourse today and how it might be possible to situate it in relation to desire and its causes. Organiser: Bogdan Wolf.

  • 4th November

London

NLS Seminar: "Transference in Psychoanalytic Treatments: From Freud to Lacan".

Our NLS Seminar, in which we invite a special guest to come and speak to us from abroad, will begin on the 4th of November, when Jean-Luc Monnier will join us to speak about the theme that will animate us this year as we work towards the next Congress of the NLS. An old friend of the London Society from the time of the twinning between what was then the London Circle and the ACF-VLB, we look forward to welcoming Jean-Luc Monnier to London and working with him once more as we embark on this new theme of work for the year.

  • 11th November

London

Laboratory for Lacanian Politics, "The Lure and Logic of Democracy Today".

After our successful launch of LLP last summer, we are now beginning a series of seminars, the first of which will explore the lures and logic of contemporary political discourse. Organisers: Roger Litten and Bogdan Wolf.

  • 18th November

London

LS2 Seminar – "Stirred by Transference". 

Part 1 – Transference a Space for Passages: A lecture by Vincent Dachy.
Part 2 – Fundamental Readings on Transference: Freud’s
Papers on Technique, brief commentary and discussion with Philip Dravers.
On this occasion, we will be exploring how the theme of transference was taken up by Freud in his
Papers on Technique, with particular emphasis on “The Dynamics of Transference” and “Remembering, Repeating and Working-Through”.

Société hellénique-NLS (Grèce)

Athènes

Séminaire de clinique psychanalytique à l’hôpital psychiatrique de Dafni, sous l’égide de la Société hellénique de la NLS :

  • 11 novembre

Présentation de malade par Hélène Bonnaud.

  • 21 novembre

Séminaire théorique et clinique sur « La clinique des psychoses en institution », par Eleni Molari.

La Crète

  • 4 novembre

Cours d’introduction à la psychanalyse : « L’histoire de l’inconscient », par Georgia Fountoulaki. Introduction au
Séminaire IV de Lacan, par Georgia Fountoulaki. Présentation et analyse d’un cas clinique sur le thème : « Un enfant symptôme », par Georgia Fountoulaki. Séminaire théorique et clinique sur le thème : « La clinique des détails », par Georgia Fountoulaki.

  • 14 novembre

Séminaire clinique et théorique sur le thème : « Psychose et délire », par Georgia Fountoulaki.

  • 17 novembre

Cours d’introduction à la psychanalyse, au collège MBS, sur le
thème
:        « Introduction au concept lacanien de jouissance », par Vlassis Skolidis.

  • 18 novembre

​Cours d’introduction à la psychanalyse :                          
                                    « Le symptôme en psychanalyse », par Marina Frangiadaki et                « L’angoisse », par Maria Papadaki.

Séminaire théorique et clinique sur le thème, « Transfert et interprétation selon le dernier Lacan », par Vlassis Skolidis.

  • 29 novembre

​Cours d'introduction à la psychanalyse, au collège MBS, sur le thème : «Le corps parlant », par Georgia Fountoulaki.

Thessalonique

  • 4 novembre

Cycle de formation à la clinique psychanalytique I. – « La paranoïa », par Nouli Apazidou et Elsa
Néofytidou
, sous la direction de Réginald Blanchet.

GIEP-NLS (Israel)

  • 3 novembre

Tel-Aviv

Rencontre Cartel.

Les membres du cartel,
« Je traduis aux murs », présenteront et discuteront le travail de traduction de, 
Je parle aux murs de Jacques Lacan. 

Avec : Netta Nashilevich, Ichay Bassok, Gali Weinstein, Natti Barnett, Samuel Nemirovsky, Noa Farchi+1.

  • 14 novembre

Tel-Aviv

Espace Passe – L'École rencontre l'avenir rencontre l’École. 

Quatrième soirée d'une série de rencontres autour des témoignages de passe donnés dans le Giep.
Lire le témoignage de passe comme un cas : dans chaque rencontre des membres présentent leur lecture et réflexions sur un témoignage. Cette rencontre traitera le témoignage d’Araceli Fuentes, « Un corps, deux écritures ». Présentations: Malka Shein, Limor Arad et Revital Barnett.

  • 28 novembre

Tel-Aviv

Conversation – Fear of the Other: Segregation or Discourse.

Avi Rybnicki témoignera du Forum Zadig de Vienne, ainsi que du lien entre la politique de l’état autrichien dans le passé et au présent, et la politique lacanienne en Autriche. 
La présentation sera suivie d’une discussion avec des membres du Giep.

ICLO-NLS (Ireland)

  • 17th November

Dublin

ICLO-NLS Open Seminar: Black Mirror Analysis.

The Open Seminar "Black Mirror/Divided Subject/Globalised World" will be based on a set of episodes of
Black Mirror allowing for the opportunity to address the notion of subjectivity in relation to the technological changes within society.
Black Mirror, an award winning TV show written by Charlie Brooker, sets up a series of dystopian near-futures where technology features heavily in contemporary modes of living. The series draws on dark satirical themes (behavioural conditioning, extreme surveillance, online mob mentality, technological enslavement, LGBTQIA+, narcissism and social media) in an attempt to capture a multiplicity of modes of jouissance in a bottle – where the ultra modern symptoms in these alternate realities present a disturbingly familiar mirror to the 21st century viewer.

Responsible: Marlene ffrench-Mullen and Raphael Montague.

Bulgarian Society of Lacanian Psychoanalysis of the NLS (Bulgaria)

  • 21st November

Sofia

Clinical Workshop 2017 – 2018.

“Clinical Workshop” is an activity of the Bulgarian Society of Lacanian Psychoanalysis, organized for the past 5 years, which opens a space for clinical discussion that is theoretically oriented by Lacanian psychoanalysis. Clinical cases are prepared in advance and come from the psychotherapeutic practice of a wide circle of professionals. Meetings for the school year 2017 – 2018 will start in September and will continue once a month until February 2018.

Presentations: Vessela Banova, Dr. Evgueni Genchev, Desislava Ivanova, Theodora Pavlova and Anguelina Daskalova.

Cercle de Cracovie (Pologne)

  • 4 novembre

Séminaire de formation clinique. De temps à autre, il est utile de rappeler les principes qui fondent la position éthique d'un analyste d’orientation lacanienne. Nous allons, encore une fois, travailler avec le texte de Eric Laurent, « Principes directeurs de
l’acte psychanalytique ». C'est aussi une leçon tant pour les personnes qui débutent que pour ceux qui ont déjà plus d'expérience clinique. Lors de la réunion, chacune des règles sera présentée par les membres du Cercle, et elle se poursuivra par une discussion avec les participants du séminaire intéressés par la clinique lacanienne. Présidente de séance : Alina Henzel-Korzeniowska.

  • 5 novembre

Séminaire de formation dans le cadre de l’étude des écrits de Lacan : Séminaire V de Lacan: Les formations de l'inconscient. Commentaire du chapitre 3 par Serge Dziomba, suivi d’une présentation d’un cas clinique par Arkadiusz
Garczyński
.. 

  • 13 novembre

Point de consultation. De Marginalia de « Constructions dans l'analyse » de Jacques-Alain Miller au transfert – les premiers pas en écoute psychanalytique des patients : volontariat des étudiants dans la maison de retraite. Continuation. Les responsables : Anna Skriwan,
Małgorzata Gorzula, Przemysław Mączka
.                                                                Présidente de séance : Małgorzata Gorzula

Cercle de Varsovie (Pologne)

  • 4 novembre

Poznan

Conférence, « Quoi de neuf ? La psychanalyse ! ».                                
     Invité : Philippe De Georges.

  • 4 – 5 novembre

Séminaire par Philippe De Georges consacrée à la lecture de la traduction polonaise du Séminaire I de Jacques Lacan, Les Ecrits techniques de Freud : « Lacan, lecteur de Freud, pratique et théorie de la psychanalyse ».

NLS-Copenhagen (Denmark)

Copenhagen

  • 6th November

"The Psychoanalytic Act", with Jakob Soelberg.

  • 11th November

Conference by Francois Sauvagnat: "Aspects of the Transference".

  • 19th November

Reading of Chapter 2 of Seminar XVII, "The Other Side of Psychoanalysis".

ACF – Portugal

Lisbonne

  • 7, 14, 21 et 28 novembre

Séminaire de clinique et contrôle.

Responsable : José Martinho.

  • 2, 9, 16, 23 et 30 novembre

Séminaire : "Le premier enseignement de Lacan".

Responsable : José Martinho.
Séminaire : "Le dernier enseignement de Lacan".
Responsable : Filipe Pereirinha.

NLS-Québec (Canada)

  • 15 novembre

Montréal

Séminaire mensuel du Pont Freudien : de lecture : le Séminaire XIV, La logique du fantasme, de Jacques Lacan, chapitre 4. Présentation par Pierre Lafrenière.

Lacanian Compass (USA)

Virtual meetings

  • 5th November

Video Conference: "Be Yourself: Delusion of Identity", by Angelina Harari.

  • 15th November

Members Conversation: "Lacan's Wager of the School".

"The Practice of Control in the Analytical Process", by Karina Tenenbaum.

Columbia, Missouri

  • 4th, 11th, 18th & 25th November

Reading Lacan’s Seminar XXIV (1976-1977), L’insu que sait de l'une-bévue s'aile à mourre. We are also reading the clinical cases from Lacanian Review, #3 by Nancy Gillespie, "Love and
Ordinary Psychosis", and "Superintendent" by Cyrus S. A. Poliakoff.  We are, of course, keeping aware of the topic of the ego in preparation for the CSD in New York in February.

Houston, Texas

  • 7th November

Reading Seminar: "Real, Variables and Formulation", Miller, Jacques-Alain; "Fine Things in Psychoanalysis", Naveau Laure, 2008; "Capiton 1", Berenger, Enric, 2006; Gueguen, Pierre-Gilles, "The Case Practice", 2008.

  • 11th November

Reading Seminar:
"Childhood and Adolescence". Lacan, Jacques, 1958: "On a Question Prior to any Possible Treatment of Psychosis", Schemas L, R and I, 
Écrits

  • 15th November

Reading Seminar: "More About Love". Lacan, Jacques: Book VIII, Chapter 22.

Reading Seminar: "Psychoanalysis and Politics". Turin Theory, 2000.

  • 30th November

Reading Seminar: "Very Last Lacan". Miller, Jaucques-Alain: 2006, Chapter 11, "Ultimísimo Lacan". Lacan,
Jacques: 
The Sinthome, 1975. Discussant: Carmen Navarro-Nino.

  • 10th & 24th November

Reading Seminar

The Seminar of Jacques Lacan:  Book
I, Chapter 12, “The Topic of Imaginary"; The Seminar of Jacques Lacan: Book II, Chapters: 3 – 6. Discussant: Mercedes Acuna.

Miami, Florida

  • 1st November

Towards the CSD11, "The Delights of the Ego".

  • 8th November

ZADIG LC Miami.

  • 14th
    November

Readings Seminar VI: Fernando Schutt (in Spanish).

  • 22nd November

ZADIG LC Miami.

  • 28th November

Readings Seminar VI: Fernando Schutt (in Spanish).

  • 29th
    November

Towards the CSD11, "The Delights of the Ego".

 

New York, NY

  • 1st
    November

Clinical Seminar on Phobia: Lacan, Jacques (1956-1957). Book IV, Object Relation Chapter 12.

  • 8th November

"Beyond the Pleasure Principle", Freud, S. (1920). Presentation by Noemi Cinader and Julie Fotheringham.

  • 29th November

Reading Seminar: Lacan, Jacques, Book II, The Ego in Freud's Theory and in the
Technique of Psychoanalysis, Chapter 6.

Omaha, Nebraska

  • 3rd, 10th, 17th, 24th November

The focus of the Seminar is mixed, in that it includes a Reading Seminar (for 2017, with a focus on the Ego in preparation for
CSD11 on "The Delights of the Ego") and also a Clinical Seminar that includes case presentations on the same theme of the Ego and the imaginary.

We are currently engaged in a close reading of Lacan's Seminar II in the Reading Seminar
.

Lacan Circle of Melbourne (Australia)

  • 18th November

Melbourne

Final Study Day on Jacques Lacan, Seminar 23 The Sinthome. Followed by the Annual General Meeting.

Secrétariat de l'Est

  • 4 novembre

Moscou

8e Atelier Lacan en Russie: « Transfert vs. suggestion – Clinique et politique »

Présidé et animé par Lilia Mahjoub.
Avec Daniel Roy. Présentations de cas par Alexandr Fedtchuk et Mikhael Strakhov

Amsterdam (The Netherlands)

  • 4th November

Amsterdam

Book presentation: Via Lacan 2.
With Nathalie Laceur and Peter Decuyper.

Berlin (Germany)

  • 13 novembre

Berlin

Séminaire 2017-2018 de l’Orientation lacanienne à Berlin : « Comprendre le narcissisme avec
Jacques Lacan ».

Le thème de notre séminaire mensuel sera le narcissisme. Nous chercherons à suivre Lacan dans son élaboration de la notion d’imaginaire, et pour ce faire, nous étudierons le
Séminaire I, Les écrits techniques de Freud, plus précisément les chapitres 7 à 12.

Notre première séance sera consacrée à la lecture ou à la relecture de l’article de Freud, « Pour introduire le narcissisme ».

Vienna (Austria)

  • 10th – 11th November

Vienna

Series of Seminars under the title, "Object Relations".

With Anne Lysy, Laure Naveau and Gil Caroz.

  • 11th November

Vienna

"Omens of Tomorrow’s World": A first meeting of "Humanismus an der Wien" with regards to the "Republik der Gelehrten".

Discussion led by: Karin Brunner, Gil Caroz, Anne Lysy, Avi Rybnicki.
 Participants: Arnit Höfle, Peter Klein, Franz Schuh, Robert Schindel

 

Introducing the Nottingham-Dublin Lacanian Studies Programme

Six guest speakers from the World Association of Psychoanalysis will introduce Jacques Lacan’s Seminar V, The Formations of the Unconscious, recently translated into English. The Seminar series will alternate between Nottingham and Dublin and take place over the course of six Saturdays in 2018.

  • Saturday 24 February 2018 at the University of Nottingham: Chapters 1-4 with Anne Lysy.
  • Saturday 28 April 2018 in Dublin: Chapters 5-9 with Jérôme Lecaux.
  • Saturday 26 May 2018 in Dublin: Chapters 10-14 with Marie-Hélène Brousse.
  • Saturday 22 September 2018 at the University of Nottingham: Chapters 15-19 with Martine Coussot.
  • Saturday 20 October 2018 at the University of Nottingham: Chapters 20-24 with Geert Hoornaert.
  • Saturday 1 December
    2018 at the University of Nottingham: Chapters 25-28 with Fabian Fajnwaks.

– Morning sessions from 9:30-13:00: A close reading of 3 to 5 chapters of Seminar V by guest speaker.

– Afternoon sessions from 14:30-17:00: A clinical conversation open only to clinicians.

Closed programme. Limited places available. Attendance by invitation only. If you wish to attend, please
send an email to veronique.voruz@le.ac.uk and florenciashanahan@gmail.com

Publications

New Releases:

La traduction polonaise du Séminaire I, Les écrits techniques Freud, de Jacques Lacan

http://jlacan.nazwa.pl/index.php/publikacje/zapowiedzi

La traduction polonaise du Triomphe de la religion, de Jacques Lacan.

Talking to Brick Walls: A Series of Presentations in the Chapel at Sainte-Anne Hospital, by Jacques Lacan.

An English translation by Adrian Price.

Journals:

THE LACANIAN REVIEW

JOURNAL OF THE NEW LACANIAN SCHOOL AND THE WORLD ASSOCIATION OF PSYCHOANALYSIS

Issue
3

LRO

THE LACANIAN REVIEW ONLINE

To receive LRO weekly by email you may subscribe by writing to: thelacanianreviewonline@gmail.com

 

Les Cahiers de l'ASREEP-NLS n° 1

LA « POSITION MÉLANCOLIQUE » DANS L'HYPERMODERNITÉ 

 

via Lacan

WEG VAN HET ONBEWUSTE ? 

Second edition of the journal of the Kring voor psychoanalyse van de NLS 

Revue International de Psychanalyse de l'EFP

Mental 35

SIGNES DISCRETS DANS LES PSYCHOSES ORDINAIRES

German journal from the L.O.B.

The 2nd issue of the ICLO-NLS Newsletter

Revue Internationale de Psychanalyse 6

Publication de la Revue internationale de psychanalyse en langue russe ; le comité éditorial est constitué de Clotilde Leguil, Daniel Roy, Philippe Stasse avec la présidente de la NLS. Commander auprès d’Inga
Metreveli: inga.metreveli@gmail.com

Publication of the London Society of the New Lacanian School

Introduction à la clinique psychanalytique. Neuf conférences espagnoles

Premier livre de Jacques-Alain Miller en langue russe.

Psychoanalytical Notebooks 31 "Brief Encounters"

Publication of the London Society of the New Lacanian School

Lacanian Ink 49

 

New Lacanian School

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