| Margaret Cohen - 1993 - 288 หน้า
...loss, a reality, that is to say, where the opposition between material and psychic no longer holds: "Desire manifests itself in the dream by the loss...in an image at the most cruel point of the object." 62 Lacan, that is to say, considers a collapse between external events and psychic reality resembling... | |
| Andrew Parker, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick - 1995 - 254 หน้า
...no longer produce itself except by repeating itself endlessly in some never attained awakening? (58) Only a rite, an endlessly repeated act, can commemorate this not very memorable encounter — for no one can say what the death of a child is, except the father qua father, that is to say,... | |
| Stefania Pandolfo - 1997 - 404 หน้า
...his father by the arm, an atrocious vision, designates a beyond that makes itself heard in the dream. Desire manifests itself in the dream by the loss expressed...the most cruel point of the object. It is only in a dream that this truly unique encounter can occur. Only a rite, an endlessly repeated act, can commemorate... | |
| Hent de Vries - 1997 - 420 หน้า
...can no longer produce itself except by repeating itself endlessly, in some never attained awakening? Only a rite, an endlessly repeated act, can commemorate this not very memorable encounter— for no one can say what the death of a child is, except the father qua father, that is to say, no conscious... | |
| Jacques Lacan - 1998 - 308 หน้า
...the dead son taking the father by the arm designates a beyond that makes itself heard in the dream. Desire manifests itself in the dream by the loss expressed...can commemorate this not very memorable encounter — for no one can say what the death of a child is, except the father qua father, that is to say,... | |
| Daniel T. O'Hara - 2003 - 396 หน้า
...the dead son taking the father by the arm designates a beyond that makes itself heard in the dream. Desire manifests itself in the dream by the loss expressed...repeated act, can commemorate this not very memorable encounter—for no one can say what the death of a death is, except the father qua father, that is... | |
| Emma Wilson - 2003 - 216 หน้า
...the dead son taking the father by the arm designates a beyond that makes itself heard in the dream. Desire manifests itself in the dream by the loss expressed...dream that this truly unique encounter can occur. (1994: 59) Slavoj Zizek, glossing Lacan, explains his reading: First [the subject] constructs a dream,... | |
| Gavriel Reisner - 2003 - 286 หน้า
...the dead son taking the father by the arm designates a beyond that makes itself heard in the dream. Desire manifests itself in the dream by the loss expressed...in an image at the most cruel point of the object. . . . Father, can't you see I'm burning? This sentence is itself a firebrand—of itself it brings... | |
| Elizabeth Stewart, Richard Feldstein, Maire Jaanus - 2004 - 336 หน้า
...Why more reality? Because the dream, by hallucinating, opens up access to the most real, which was the "loss expressed in an image at the most cruel point of the object," the dead child, the Thing in its moment of non-sense and of horror; hallucination of the Thing in its... | |
| Anthony Mellors - 2005 - 402 หน้า
...burning?'31 The look is one thing (the dead child 'looks just as if he is asleep'), the voice is another: 'Desire manifests itself in the dream by the loss...expressed in an image at the most cruel point of the object.'32 The poem's reality, too, is of the order of a gaze that does not see; its uncanniness arises... | |
| |