In recent years psychoanalysis -- especially Lacanian theory -- has been gradually acknowledged as a vital resource in the ongoing re-orientation of contemporary political theory and analysis. Of particular note is that the work of Jacques Lacan is increasingly being used by major political philosophers associated with the Left. This indicates the dynamic emergence of a new theoretico-political horizon: that of the 'Lacanian Left'. However, this has yet to be properly conceived and structured as a field. The Lacanian Left is the first book to bring it into academic consciousness and to draw its implications for concrete political analysis in a systematic way. It offers: / An accessible mapping of its main contours. / A detailed examination of the points of convergence and divergence between the major figures active or at the periphery of this terrain, including Slavoj h the central Lacanian notion of 'enjoyment', The Lacanian Left puts forward innovative analyses of political power and authority, nationalism, European identity, consumerism and advertising culture, de-democratisation and post-democracy.It will be of value to everyone interested in exploring the potential of psychoanalysis to reinvigorate political theory, critical political analysis and democratic politics.
Author(s): Yannis Stavrakakis
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: 329
COPYRIGHT......Page 3
Contents......Page 4
Bibliographical Note......Page 5
Acknowledgements......Page 7
Introduction: Locating the Lacanian Left......Page 10
Part I Theory: Dialectics of Disavowal......Page 44
1 Antinomies of Creativity: Lacan and Castoriadis on Social Construction and the Political......Page 46
2 Laclau with Lacan on Jouissance: Negotiating the Affective Limits of Discourse......Page 75
3 Zizekian ‘Perversions’: The Lure of Antigone and the Fetishism of the Act......Page 118
Excursus on Badiou......Page 159
Part II Analysis: Dialectics of Enjoyment......Page 170
4 What Sticks? From Symbolic Power to Jouissance......Page 172
5 Enjoying the Nation: A Success Story?......Page 198
6 Lack of Passion: European Identity Revisited......Page 220
7 The Consumerist ‘Politics of Jouissance’ and the Fantasy of Advertising......Page 236
8 Democracy in Post-Democratic Times......Page 263
Bibliography......Page 295
Index......Page 321