Examines Lacan's key seminar on sexual
difference, knowledge, desire, and love. This
collection offers the first sustained, in-depth
commentary on Seminar XX, Encore, considered the
cornerstone of Lacan's work on the themes of sexual
difference, knowledge, jouissance, and love. Although
Seminar XX was originally popularized as Lacan's
treatise on feminine sexuality, these essays, by some of
today's foremost Lacanian scholars, go beyond feminine
sexuality to address Lacan's significant intertwining
concern with the rupture between reality and the real
produced by modern science, and the implications of this
rupture for subjectivity, knowledge, jouissance, and the
body. The essays clarify basic concepts, but for
readers already familiar with Lacan they also offer
sophisticated workings-through of the more challenging
and obscure arguments in Encore—both by tracing their
historical development across Lacan's œuvre and by
demonstrating their relation to particular
philosophical, theological, mathematical, and scientific
concepts. They cover much of the terrain necessary for
understanding sexual difference—not in terms of
chromosomes, body parts, choice of sexual partner, or
varieties of sexual practice—but in terms of one's
position vis-à-vis the Other and the kind of jouissance
one is able to obtain. In so doing, they make
significant interventions in the debates regarding sex,
gender, and sexuality in feminist theory, philosophy,
queer theory, and cultural studies.
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