I spent much of this week reviewing Alain Badiou’s lectures on Lacan, and I’m increasingly convinced that he is the strongest reader and foremost inheritor of Lacan’s thought to date — someone whose work not only cuts to the bone of Lacanian psychoanalysis but also, crucially, extends Lacan’s project in wildly new yet thoroughly Lacanian directions.
Remainders of Disjunction
Remainders of Disjunction
Remainders of Disjunction
I spent much of this week reviewing Alain Badiou’s lectures on Lacan, and I’m increasingly convinced that he is the strongest reader and foremost inheritor of Lacan’s thought to date — someone whose work not only cuts to the bone of Lacanian psychoanalysis but also, crucially, extends Lacan’s project in wildly new yet thoroughly Lacanian directions.