Owlseyes ’s Reviews > The Autistic Subject: On the Threshold of Language > Status Update
Owlseyes
is on page 87 of 292
The “hole" in the symbolic” is specified by Lacan as a defining feature of psychosis, in the same way that the signifier of the Name-of-the-Father is a defining feature of neurosis (p. 248).
— Mar 03, 2024 01:39AM
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Owlseyes ’s Previous Updates
Owlseyes
is on page 284 of 292
....surely one should listen to what they say—
on the threshold of language.
— Mar 04, 2024 12:15AM
on the threshold of language.
Owlseyes
is on page 283 of 292
"As the name indicates, autistics hear themselves. They hear lots of things. Normally this even leads to hallucination, and hallucinations have always a more or less vocal character. Not all autistics hear voices, but they articulate lots of things … That you have trouble hearing, grasping the point of what they say, doesn’t prevent these people from being rather verbose. (pp. 19–20)"
-Lacan (1989)
— Mar 04, 2024 12:14AM
-Lacan (1989)
Owlseyes
is on page 221 of 292
"They are simply people for whom the weight of words is very serious and who are not disposed to take their ease with these words. (p. 3)"
Lacan (1975)
— Mar 04, 2024 12:07AM
Lacan (1975)
Owlseyes
is on page 172 of 292
In La Bataille De L’Autisme (2012a ), Laurent associates his notion of the void in the real with the Kleinian conception of the autistic experience of the “black hole,” originally associated with Frances Tustin’s (1986) work on autism.
— Mar 04, 2024 12:01AM
Owlseyes
is on page 141 of 292
One of the most significant characteristics defining autistic behavior according to Leo Kanner (1943) is “an anxiously obsessive desire for the maintenance of sameness ” (p. 245).
— Mar 03, 2024 12:08PM
Owlseyes
is on page 117 of 292
Laplanche and Leclaire also relate the first level of symbolization to the “experience” presented in Freud’s (1920) account of the Fort-da
game (“gone-there” in German).
— Mar 03, 2024 01:50AM
game (“gone-there” in German).
Owlseyes
is on page 88 of 292
That is why Lacan argues that “If the neurotic inhabits language, the psychotic is inhabited, possessed, by language” (SIII, p. 250)
— Mar 03, 2024 01:41AM
Owlseyes
is on page 83 of 292
...in Seminar III, Lacan is not oriented at deciphering psychotic symptoms in order to deduce the underlying structure of psychosis. He is focused on characterizing the linguistic mechanism that constitutes the psychotic mode of access to language, in order to structurally explain psychosis and its symptoms.
— Feb 29, 2024 08:56AM
Owlseyes
is on page 69 of 292
In his paper “Psycho-Analytic Notes of an Autobiographical Account of a Case of Paranoia” (1911), Freud bases his analysis of psychosis on a single literary case study of the autobiography of Dr. Daniel Paul Schreber,
Memoirs of My Nervous Illness (1955)
— Feb 29, 2024 04:48AM
Memoirs of My Nervous Illness (1955)

