ISBN-13: A780262032995 / Angielski / Twarda / 2003 / 269 str.
ISBN-13: A780262032995 / Angielski / Twarda / 2003 / 269 str.
Stan bardzo dobry - książka była czytana, ale jeszcze długo posłuży innym czytelnikom. Ma ślady używania - otwierania i kartkowania, rysy, zabrudzenia. Wygląda jak książka, którą wypożyczasz w bibliotece.Jacques Lacan claimed that his theory of feminine sexuality, including the infamous proposition, the woman does not exist, constituted a revision of his earlier work on the ethics of psychoanalysis. In Imagine There's no Woman, Joan Copjec show how Freud's ragtag, nearly incoherent notion of sublimation was refashioned by Lacan to become the key term in his ethics. To trace the link between feminine being and Lacan's ethics of sublimation, Copjec argues, one must take the negative proposition about the woman's existence not as just another nominalist denunciation of thought's illusions about the existence of universal, but as recognition of the power of thought, which posits and gives birth to the difference of objects from themselves. While the relativist potision currently dominant insists on the difference between my views and another's, Lacan insists on this difference within the object I see. The popular position fuels the disaffection with which we regard a world in a state of decomposition, whereas the Lacanian alternative argues our investment in a world that awaits our invention.