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By David Macey Lacan in Contexts (1st First Edition) [Paperback]

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First published January 1, 1988

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About the author

David Macey

30 books16 followers
David had been for many years a highly esteemed research associate in the Department of French at Leeds, and in 2010 was also appointed Special Professor at the University of Nottingham. Born in Sunderland in 1949, he studied at University College London and became a highly acclaimed writer and translator particularly in the field of contemporary French philosophy and political thought. Among his numerous and influential publications, many of them widely translated, were Lacan in Contexts (1988), The Lives of Michel Foucault (1993), The Penguin Dictionary of Critical Theory (2000), Frantz Fanon: A Life (2000 – described by the New Statesman as ‘the year's biographical tour de force’), and Michel Foucault (2004). He translated over sixty books from French, including Michel Foucault’s Society Must be Defended (2003), and more recently Christian Baudelot and Roger Establet, Suicide (2008) Jean-Claude Kauffmann, The Single Woman and the Fairy-Tale Prince (2008), Boris Cyrulnik, Resilience (2009), and Michel Wieviorka, Violence (2009). David was the husband of Professor Margaret Atack (Professor of French), and the father of Aaron, John and Chantelle.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Peter Mathews.
Author 12 books169 followers
May 13, 2018
David Macey's Lacan in Contexts is, quite simply, the best book I've read about Lacan to date. There are a number of key things that set it apart. First, Macey has demonstrated mastery over his topic, as shown by his sophisticated readings of not only Freud and Lacan, but other related linguists and philosophers. Second, he clearly knows and understands the French context in which Lacan was operating. Third, he is brutally objective, recognizing the importance of Lacan's work while being able to show its shortcomings. Finally, he takes a genealogical view of Lacan's work, showing brilliantly how it has changed and evolved in ways that often see Lacan contradicting his earlier positions.

The necessity of such a genealogy is made plain in Chapter 1: The Final State. This "final state" refers to the mythologizing attempts of Lacan and Lacanians to present Lacan's work as a coherent whole. In Jacques Lacan: An Outline of a Life and a History of a System of Thought, Roudinesco lays much of the blame for this hardening of Lacan's thought into an orthodoxy at the feet of Jacques-Alain Miller, but my sense is that it is a widespread practice in the field of Lacan studies. In this opening chapter Macey gives an extensive overview of how this attitude has come into existence, including the particularly eye-opening example of the journal Screen's adoption of Lacanian psychoanalysis as its main theoretical basis.

Chapter 2: Retrospective provides a valuable reminder of the context in which Lacan's intellect was formed, particularly the anti-German/Jewish sentiment that prevailed in France for much of that time.

Chapter 3: Baltimore in the Early Morning connects Lacan's thought with that of the surrealists, whose importance, Macey shows, is crucial to understanding his work. Macey especially notes the way that people like Duchamp, Leiris, and Queneau influenced Lacan's style, especially his wordplay and puns. The surrealists also give Lacan an early model for the critique of language, as well as supplying him with a crucial critique of feminine sexuality in the form of Breton's "convulsive beauty."

Chapter 4: Philosophy and Post-Philosophy gives the reader some contexts about the state of philosophy in France during Lacan's early life, and his ambivalent relationship to it. Indeed, his implicit admiration for Kojève and Sartre are symptoms of the move away from the neo-Kantianism doctrine prevalent in French schools. Kojève is also singled out here as a crucial influence on Lacan's style.

Chapter 5: Linguistics or Linguisterie? is an in-depth analysis of Lacan's use of linguistics. Macey asks whether Lacan can be taken seriously as a linguist, or even a philosopher of language, to which the answer is most decidedly answered in the negative. That does not mean, however, that he has nothing to contribute in those areas, but his use of these language-related fields is playful rather than serious - it is, in Lacan's terminology, a form of linguisterie.

Chapter 6: The Dark Continent turns the attention to the issues of gender and sexuality in Lacan's work. Macey is scathing in his review of Lacan's sexism, and argues that the theory of the phallus, for all its appeal to feminism, retains all the problems of a patriarchal discourse. While I am very sympathetic to Macey's view here, I thought this was the weakest part of the book, mostly because he does not address why it is that so many feminists have seen Lacan's ideas as a useful tool for critiquing patriarchal notions of gender and sexuality. I also didn't like how he often substituted the views of Lacan's disciples for those of Lacan himself.

On the whole, I found Lacan in Contexts to be a brilliant book, full of sharp analysis and genuine insight into what Lacan was trying to do and what influenced his ideas. I would go so far as to say that this book has revolutionized my view of both Lacan and his critics: I cannot read the unhistorical glosses of his ideas without thinking about the cracks and discontinuities that, as Macey reveals here, lie beneath that apparently smooth surface.
Profile Image for Jamie.
12 reviews
January 18, 2021
One of the best books I've read in a while - Macey's style is as always wonderful, his knowledge is stunning, and his critique of Lacan is pretty devastating. What is so brilliant about this text and critique though is that it engages with Lacan only on Lacan's terms, and still provides a brilliant analysis.
Profile Image for jesse.
67 reviews13 followers
April 1, 2023
Of course the most lucid English biography of Lacan would be written by an anti-Lacanian. Macey's very curmudgeonly dry anglo sensibilities provide a lot of stability and comfort. Chapters on surrealism and feminism were excellent.
52 reviews1 follower
August 21, 2020
Macey is a gifted scholar. This book has completely transformed how I view psychoanalysis. I’m grateful for it.

Macey uses his masterful grasp of psychoanalysis to brutally criticize Lacan. His scholarship is so deep that I imagine he must love psychoanalysis on some level, but in this book he presents it in it as ugly, incoherent, dishonest and prejudiced. I wish I could ask him if he thinks there’s anything valuable about Lacan.
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