Typical responses to a confrontation with failures in authority, or what Lacanians term ‘the lack in the Other’, involve attempts to shore it up. A patient undergoing psychoanalysis eventually faces the impossibility of doing this successfully; the Other will always be lacking. This creates a space through which she can reimagine how she might intervene in her suffering. Similarly, when coronavirus forces us to confront the brute fact of the lack in the Other at the socio-political level, we have the opportunity to discover a space for acting rather than continuing symptomatic behaviour that increasingly fails to work
Waiting at the border, the government office, the hospital. Waiting one’s turn, holding the line. Wa...
Numerous scholars in the social sciences and humanities have speedily analysed and interpreted the C...
How have the white, middle‐class, Eurocentric ideologies and practices of the Western psychoanalytic...
This is the final version. Available from Routledge via the DOI in this record. Researching “waiting...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Routledge via the DOI in this recordAlthoug...
Researching “waiting” necessitates practices of attunement to multiple coexisting temporalities and ...
This paper opens up the relationship between vulnerability and the temporalities of care. It takes ‘...
This article offers some reflections on two important conferences held at the Freud Museum in London...
This editorial introduces a collection of research articles and reflections on what it means to wait...
© The Author(s) 2017. Waiting is one of the most common phenomena in ethnographic and other communit...
This article explores the nature of artistic and psychoanalytic encounters that promote a kind of en...
The author, a child and adolescent psychoanalytic psychotherapist working in the UK NHS, ponders the...
This is the final version. Available on open access from BMJ Publishing Group via the DOI in this re...
CITATION: Ornellas, A. & Engelbrecht, L. K. 2018. The Life Esidimeni crisis : why a neoliberal agend...
This paper develops an account of the camouflaging of austerity as an institutional strategy. In doi...
Waiting at the border, the government office, the hospital. Waiting one’s turn, holding the line. Wa...
Numerous scholars in the social sciences and humanities have speedily analysed and interpreted the C...
How have the white, middle‐class, Eurocentric ideologies and practices of the Western psychoanalytic...
This is the final version. Available from Routledge via the DOI in this record. Researching “waiting...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Routledge via the DOI in this recordAlthoug...
Researching “waiting” necessitates practices of attunement to multiple coexisting temporalities and ...
This paper opens up the relationship between vulnerability and the temporalities of care. It takes ‘...
This article offers some reflections on two important conferences held at the Freud Museum in London...
This editorial introduces a collection of research articles and reflections on what it means to wait...
© The Author(s) 2017. Waiting is one of the most common phenomena in ethnographic and other communit...
This article explores the nature of artistic and psychoanalytic encounters that promote a kind of en...
The author, a child and adolescent psychoanalytic psychotherapist working in the UK NHS, ponders the...
This is the final version. Available on open access from BMJ Publishing Group via the DOI in this re...
CITATION: Ornellas, A. & Engelbrecht, L. K. 2018. The Life Esidimeni crisis : why a neoliberal agend...
This paper develops an account of the camouflaging of austerity as an institutional strategy. In doi...
Waiting at the border, the government office, the hospital. Waiting one’s turn, holding the line. Wa...
Numerous scholars in the social sciences and humanities have speedily analysed and interpreted the C...
How have the white, middle‐class, Eurocentric ideologies and practices of the Western psychoanalytic...