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Overture to this Collection

Hook, Derek; Neill, Calum; Vanheule, Stijn

Authors

Derek Hook

Stijn Vanheule



Contributors

Derek Hook
Editor

Stijn Vanheule
Editor

Abstract

By citing Buffon's famous aphorism “The style is the man himself” as the opening lines of his Écrits, Lacan invites us to consider a number of salient themes concerning the following: the role of reading and interpretation in psychoanalysis; paradoxes pertaining to the functioning of language; how communication might be defined (as “receiving one's own message from the Other in an inverted form”); and the transmission of psychoanalysis. Buffon's pronouncement is a refrain that Lacan returns to throughout this short text, and it proves a means of illustrating familiar thememes within his teaching (the trappings of imaginary, the role of the symbolic Other, the functioning of the proper name) while also signalling the pertinence of the concept of object a. The echoing reciting of Buffon's phrase forces us to reconsider if we know what the phrase means, and indeed, whether style and (apparent) substance might be two sides of the continuous surface of a Mobius strip. Lacan's text operates at once as a puzzle that defies easy assimilation, a Russian doll of literary allusions and references and an easter egg of hidden and insinuated inter-textual meanings. For all of these reasons, the Overture – itself an exemplar of the object a – provides an instructive text with which to open Lacan's magnum opus.

Citation

Hook, D., Neill, C., & Vanheule, S. (2024). Overture to this Collection. In C. Neill, D. Hook, & S. Vanheule (Eds.), Reading Lacan's Ecrits: From 'Overture' to 'Presentation on Psychical Causality'. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003368649-2

Acceptance Date Apr 25, 2023
Online Publication Date Feb 23, 2024
Publication Date Feb 23, 2024
Deposit Date Feb 22, 2024
Publisher Routledge
Book Title Reading Lacan's Ecrits: From 'Overture' to 'Presentation on Psychical Causality'
ISBN 9781032437361
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003368649-2
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/3084416