X

Lacan: Anti-Philosophy 3 (The Seminars of Alain Badiou)

Product ID : 46639772


Galleon Product ID 46639772
Model
Manufacturer
Shipping Dimension Unknown Dimensions
I think this is wrong?
-
2,040

*Price and Stocks may change without prior notice
*Packaging of actual item may differ from photo shown

Pay with

About Lacan: Anti-Philosophy 3

Product Description Alain Badiou is arguably the most significant philosopher in Europe today. Badiou’s seminars, given annually on major conceptual and historical topics, constitute an enormously important part of his work. They served as laboratories for his thought and public illuminations of his complex ideas yet remain little known. This book, the transcript of Badiou’s year-long seminar on the psychoanalytic theory of Jacques Lacan, is the first volume of his seminars to be published in English, opening up a new and vital aspect of his thinking. In a highly original and compelling account of Lacan’s theory and therapeutic practice, Badiou considers the challenge that Lacan poses to fundamental philosophical topics such as being, the subject, and truth. Badiou argues that Lacan is a singular figure of the “anti-philosopher,” a series of thinkers stretching back to Saint Paul and including Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, with Lacan as the last great anti-philosopher of modernity. The book offers a forceful reading of an enigmatic yet foundational thinker and sheds light on the crucial role that Lacan plays in Badiou’s own thought. This seminar, more accessible than some of Badiou’s more difficult works, will be profoundly valuable for the many readers across academic disciplines, art and literature, and political activism who find his thought essential. Review Badiou's seminar is much more than yet another book on Lacan―it is a book with Lacan, a unique experience of the intense dialogue of a great philosopher with another great thinker. It does not render Badiou's thoughts on Lacan―it renders the living process in which we can witness the gestation of deep insights. A book for everyone who wants to see how thinking works. -- Slavoj Žižek, author of Less Than Nothing and Absolute Recoil Badiou’s ‘antiphilosophy’―situated at the antipodes of moral philosophy and launching a challenge to the authority of philosophy as institutional pedagogy―turns crucially on the seminar he devoted to Jacques Lacan from 1994 to 1995. Lacan, a rebel with a cause, will stand alongside Nietzsche, Wittgenstein, and Saint Paul in Badiou’s confraternity of thinkers outside the norm. Hysterical master, ontologist of the matheme, philosopher of conditions (of politics, of desire), apologist of acts that come to being in being said, theorist sans pareil of the ‘real’ in the real world, of the impasse enabling something rare and extraordinary―each Lacan in due course proved fundamental to resolving the 'subject of freedom' problem that gripped Badiou in the long aftermath of May '68 and informed his magisterial Being and Event. In this lucidly translated and brilliantly introduced transposition of a teaching-event―the ‘Badiou-Lacan event’―the participant enters a transfixing world of theory as it happens. Badiou’s seminar, much like Lacan’s, is something between an art form, a politics of assembly, a Brechtian theater of shake-up, a lesson on indifference in its relation to sexual difference, and a learning curve in classical formalization. Be warned, you are on course to experience philosophy at the break of noon! -- Emily Apter, author of Unexceptional Politics On Obstruction, Impasse, and the Impolitic 'Living philosophy.' This is what this auspicious first volume of the seminars of Badiou reads like. Through it we get to hear one of the greatest philosophers of our time grapple with the astonishing ideas of another, one of his own teachers: Jacques Lacan. Both exciting and rewarding, it simply cannot be passed up. -- Joan Copjec, author of Read My Desire: Lacan Against the Historicists Badiou has always seen Lacan as both a key ally and rival for any contemporary theory of the subject, in particular one that seeks nothing less than to make possible what initially seems impossible. There is no better way to grasp what’s at stake in this sympathetic rivalry than to read this engaging and lucid seminar, which is here deftly translated and presen