Atjaunināt sīkdatņu piekrišanu

Psychoanalysis of Act and Action: An Itinerary through Lacan, Philosophy, and Crime [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 190 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, 19 Line drawings, black and white; 19 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Oct-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041071434
  • ISBN-13: 9781041071433
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Formāts: Hardback, 190 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, 19 Line drawings, black and white; 19 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Oct-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041071434
  • ISBN-13: 9781041071433
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
A Psychoanalysis of Act and Action brings together the study of the philosophy of action and Jacques Lacans psychoanalytic theory.

Drawing on the works of Freud and Lacan, this book examines desire and the unconscious as key frameworks for understanding action. Londońo-Paredes explores key premises in the philosophy of action, while demonstrating how these may fall short in light of Lacans ideas. The book proposes an alternative to dominant philosophical interpretations, exploring Lacans framework through concepts such as the graph, the act, the transgressive act, acting out, and passage ą lacte. The paradoxes of action, along with forms of action that carry moral and symbolic weight are examined from a psychoanalytic perspective, helping us to understand the interpretive boundaries of action. By intertwining philosophical and psychoanalytic perspectives with clinical illustrations of real crimes, the book offers a fresh approach to action and act.

A Psychoanalysis of Act and Action will be essential for psychoanalytically informed readers interested in Lacan. It will also be of interest to academics and scholars of the philosophy of mind and action, cultural studies, and mental disorders.

Recenzijas

It is rare to find a scholar who is as well-versed in philosophy as in Lacanian psychoanalysis and who is willing to stage a genuine encounter between these two domains. This is what we find in Diego Londońo's A Psychoanalysis of Act and Action: a nuanced thinking through how these two traditions conceptualize acts and actions with a view to grasping the importance of Lacan's contributions in this regard. A dazzling 'ambidexterity of analysis' comes to the fore, where philosophical resources are brought to bear on multiple facets of Lacan's teaching, and where philosophical notions are re-thought psychoanalytically. A tour de force; the scholarly - and psychoanalytic - brilliance shines through, page after page. - Derek Hook, author of Six Moments in Lacan.

This is the first book in English that demonstrates how Lacans theory cannot simply be understood as the outcome of the linguistic turn in psychoanalysis. With exemplary clarity and a thorough grasp of Lacans entire body of work, the author shows that speech and language constitute but one side of Lacans innovative return to Freud, and that this symbolic dimension needs to be balanced against an equally important, yet often overlooked conception of the act. Indeed, throughout his long and productive career, Lacan defined many fundamental notions of psychoanalytic practice, including the clinical position of the analyst itself, in terms of a certain relationship to action. It is no exaggeration to say that, in teasing out this psychoanalysis of act and action, the author allows the reader to discover a crucial aspect of Lacans contributions that has never received the attention it deserves. This book is a truly magnificent feat of scholarship, which will be an important reference source for many years to come. - Dany Nobus, Professor of Psychoanalytic Psychology, Brunel University of London

It has been several decades since the so-called "linguistic turn." Yet, no book rigorously addresses the difference between act and action, between performativity, performance, and pragmatism at least not from within the Lacanian field. And yet, without such distinctions, what would it mean to think the question of the act in psychoanalysis? In this sharp and compelling book, Diego Londońo takes up this challenge, offering a powerful and decisive intervention into contemporary debates in the philosophy of mind, showing how psychoanalysis particularly Lacanian psychoanalysis cannot be reduced to a theory of cognition or representation. Through a careful engagement with concepts such as anxiety and the gaze (as they appear in the difference between passage ą lacte and acting out), as well as the relation between ethics and aesthetics in sublimation, and the subjective division between statement and utterance, Londońo reminds us of Lacans crucial question: What is a philosophy that takes psychoanalysis seriously? Thus, the question is not whether Lacan will survive the twenty-first century but whether the twenty-first century can survive Lacans questions. - Carlos Gómez Camarena, International School of the Forums of the Lacanian Field and Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico

This book presents an exceptionally nuanced exploration of the psychoanalytic understanding of human action. Through meticulous theoretical analysis, the text illuminates the radical originality of the psychoanalytic approach to act, distinguishing it from conventional philosophical and neurobiological paradigms. The work reveals how psychoanalysis transcends reductive explanations of human behavior, offering instead a framework that accommodates both the symbolic dimensions of action and the fundamental impasses of language. This sophisticated theoretical contribution offers clinicians, theorists, and cultural critics an innovative perspective and a powerful conceptual apparatus for addressing the complexities of modern subjectivity and its manifold expressions in both clinical settings and broader social conflicts. - Silvia Rivera-Largacha, Psychoanalyst and Consultant for Professional Care in Mental Health and Psychosocial Support at UNDP United Nations Development Programme Colombia It is rare to find a scholar who is as well-versed in philosophy as in Lacanian psychoanalysis and who is willing to stage a genuine encounter between these two domains. This is what we find in Diego Londońo's A Psychoanalysis of Act and Action: a nuanced thinking through how these two traditions conceptualize acts and actions with a view to grasping the importance of Lacan's contributions in this regard. A dazzling 'ambidexterity of analysis' comes to the fore, where philosophical resources are brought to bear on multiple facets of Lacan's teaching, and where philosophical notions are re-thought psychoanalytically. A tour de force; the scholarly - and psychoanalytic - brilliance shines through, page after page. - Derek Hook, author of Six Moments in Lacan.

This is the first book in English that demonstrates how Lacans theory cannot simply be understood as the outcome of the linguistic turn in psychoanalysis. With exemplary clarity and a thorough grasp of Lacans entire body of work, the author shows that speech and language constitute but one side of Lacans innovative return to Freud, and that this symbolic dimension needs to be balanced against an equally important, yet often overlooked conception of the act. Indeed, throughout his long and productive career, Lacan defined many fundamental notions of psychoanalytic practice, including the clinical position of the analyst itself, in terms of a certain relationship to action. It is no exaggeration to say that, in teasing out this psychoanalysis of act and action, the author allows the reader to discover a crucial aspect of Lacans contributions that has never received the attention it deserves. This book is a truly magnificent feat of scholarship, which will be an important reference source for many years to come. - Dany Nobus, Professor of Psychoanalytic Psychology, Brunel University of London

It has been several decades since the so-called "linguistic turn." Yet, no book rigorously addresses the difference between act and action, between performativity, performance, and pragmatism at least not from within the Lacanian field. And yet, without such distinctions, what would it mean to think the question of the act in psychoanalysis? In this sharp and compelling book, Diego Londońo takes up this challenge, offering a powerful and decisive intervention into contemporary debates in the philosophy of mind, showing how psychoanalysis particularly Lacanian psychoanalysis cannot be reduced to a theory of cognition or representation. Through a careful engagement with concepts such as anxiety and the gaze (as they appear in the difference between passage ą lacte and acting out), as well as the relation between ethics and aesthetics in sublimation, and the subjective division between statement and utterance, Londońo reminds us of Lacans crucial question: What is a philosophy that takes psychoanalysis seriously? Thus, the question is not whether Lacan will survive the twenty-first century but whether the twenty-first century can survive Lacans questions. - Carlos Gómez Camarena, International School of the Forums of the Lacanian Field and Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico

This book presents an exceptionally nuanced exploration of the psychoanalytic understanding of human action. Through meticulous theoretical analysis, the text illuminates the radical originality of the psychoanalytic approach to act, distinguishing it from conventional philosophical and neurobiological paradigms. The work reveals how psychoanalysis transcends reductive explanations of human behavior, offering instead a framework that accommodates both the symbolic dimensions of action and the fundamental impasses of language. This sophisticated theoretical contribution offers clinicians, theorists, and cultural critics an innovative perspective and a powerful conceptual apparatus for addressing the complexities of modern subjectivity and its manifold expressions in both clinical settings and broader social conflicts. - Silvia Rivera-Largacha, Psychoanalyst and Consultant for Professional Care in Mental Health and Psychosocial Support at UNDP United Nations Development Programme Colombia

Introduction

Chapter
1. Action and the Psychoanalytic Issues of a Concept. A Strategy
Towards a New Conception of Action

Chapter
2. Sifting Action Through the Strainer of Desire and Psychoanalysis:
The Graph of Desire (Part I)

Chapter
3. Reinterpreting Action Through the Drive and Fantasy: The Graph of
Desire (Part II)

Chapter
4. The Psychoanalytic Setting as the Linguistic Key of Action

Chapter
5. Paradoxes of Action: The passage ą lacte and Unmotivated Crime

Chapter
6. The Socio-Anthropological Background of Action: Between
Determinism and Free Will

Chapter
7. Phantasy and Fundamental Fantasy: A Tour Through Anglo-analytic
Philosophy of Psychoanalysis

Chapter
8. The Serial Killers Act and the passage ą lacte, or How to
Describe Radical Action

Chapter
9. A Critical Appraisal of the Ethics of Action: A Brief
Psychoanalytic Review

Chapter
10. Action Caught up in the Drift of the Group: The Collective Push
of Action Display

Conclusion

References to J. Lacans Works

References to S. Freuds Works

General References

Index
Diego Enrique Londońo-Paredes is a psychoanalyst and clinical psychologist who received his doctorate in psychology from the Université Rennes 2, France. He is currently Professor at Escuela de Psicoanįlisis of the Universidad Nacional de Colombia and Universidad Manuela Beltrįn, and a member of the psychoanalytic association, Analķtica.