Jacques Lacan
Feminine Sexuality
Edited by Juliet Mitchell and Jacqueline Rose
Jacques Lacan is arguably the most controversial psychoanalyst of our time. Psychoanalysis is
certainly one of the most contested areas of debate within feminism. This book
presents articles on feminine sexuality by Lacan and members of the école
freudienne, the school of psychoanalysis that Lacan directed in Paris from 1964
to 1980.
The question of feminine sexuality has divded the psychoanalytic movement since the 1920s.
Despite their opposition to each other, contemporary psychoanalysis and feminism
both reject Freud's phallocentrism. This book forcefully reasserts the importance of the
castration complex in Freud's work and of the phallus in the work of Lacan,
offering them not as a reflection of a theory based on male supremacy and priviledge
but as the terms through which any such priviledge is exposed as a fraud. Lacan's
rereading of Freud is seen here to reveal, in a way that no other account has
been able to do, the arbitrary and fictional nature of both male and female sexual
identity and, specifically, the fantasy behind the category "woman" as the
dominant fetish of our culture. These texts reveal that women constantly exceed
the barriers of the definition to which they are confined.
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