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Author Topic: Welcome, Freud-Lacan!  (Read 590 times)
martle
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« on: 19:44:42, 10-06-2008 »

I see we have a distinguished-sounding new member to welcome! And a familiar name from TOP, I think. Hop aboard, F-L!  Smiley
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Green. Always green.
John W
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« Reply #1 on: 20:01:32, 10-06-2008 »

Yes welcome, Freud-LucanRoll Eyes   Freud-Lacan

I'm not familiar with your contributions to TOP so don't know your music interests but this place could do with some advice on matters of psychoanalysis and identity. We don't know who we are nor why we're here  Huh

John W
« Last Edit: 20:13:48, 10-06-2008 by John W » Logged
martle
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« Reply #2 on: 20:06:51, 10-06-2008 »

...so much so that some of us can't even get your name right.  Roll Eyes
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Green. Always green.
John W
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« Reply #3 on: 20:12:30, 10-06-2008 »

...so much so that some of us can't even get your name right.  Roll Eyes

Thank you martle, a Freudian slip, so common at this place eh? Freud-Lacan will be pleased to know  Cheesy


John W

Where is Freud Lord Lucan anyway?

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Ron Dough
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WWW
« Reply #4 on: 20:39:11, 10-06-2008 »

Yes, another name from TOP to be welcomed: an ability to deal with naughty children is a talent useful even here, occasionally. Judging from your biog., you'll find plenty here to keep you occupied. Enjoy, F-L!

Ron


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Stanley Stewart
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Well...it was 1935


« Reply #5 on: 21:16:55, 10-06-2008 »

A warm welcome, Freud-Lacan!     Smiley
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thompson1780
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« Reply #6 on: 23:09:15, 10-06-2008 »

Hello F-L,

I'll probably be a tad conscious that you'll be analysing me, as I act a little like a naughty school boy on this forum sometimes, especially when a double-entendre is in the offing (but in my defence, it's always martle who puts me up to it).  He just can't help himself when posts can be taken the wrong way.... *

But I hope we have some serious conversations too - I'm always fascinated how people have different viewpoints of music, and how they express them, and I'm sure your experience will add more wonderful insight.

Have fun here

Tommo

*  MARTLE! STOP RIGHT NOW!  (See what I mean?)
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Made by Thompson & son, at the Violin & c. the West end of St. Paul's Churchyard, LONDON
martle
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« Reply #7 on: 23:15:18, 10-06-2008 »

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Green. Always green.
increpatio
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‫‬‭‮‪‫‬‭‮


« Reply #8 on: 00:21:53, 11-06-2008 »

Welcome F-L!  I'm taking a bit of a break from Lacan at the moment...started on some Freud instead for something more easily digestible.

I like music from medieval polyphony through to Birtwistle. I don't care for Webern, Stockhausen, Boulez. So, interests pretty eclectic.
With a contrastingly narrow set of disinterests Wink
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Freud-Lacan
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« Reply #9 on: 07:19:20, 11-06-2008 »

Yes, Lacan can be heavy going. he once said that 'understanding' lay in the reader and that reading his text was like prospecting for gold it was meant to be very hard work for the occasional glimpse of understanding. The reader interprets his texts and derives meaning from them. I recently completed an MA thesis on the jouissance of the Other - which I find absolutely fascinating. It can help to explain behaviour like self-harming - which i was going to research further but I need the discipline to get round to it. I think High Culture is where I can experiance 'epiphany' listening to great music for example, there was a performance of Beethoven's Fifth the other day on R3 and I thought WOW! Beethoven can access the sublime unlike any other composer I know! Smiley
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Freud-Lacan
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Formerly known as Chafing Dish


« Reply #10 on: 07:43:48, 11-06-2008 »

WOW! Beethoven can access the sublime unlike any other composer I know! Smiley
Not to (let the cat out) mention the subliminal...
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George Garnett
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« Reply #11 on: 07:48:56, 11-06-2008 »

Welcome aboard, Freud-Lacan. Good to have you here.

the jouissance of the Other
A hobby of at least one other poster here.  
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Morticia
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« Reply #12 on: 08:35:11, 11-06-2008 »

Greetings Freud-Lacan from a fellow resident of the Northern Territories of Lunnun. Good to see you here. I've enjoyed reading your posts on the Beeb board. If you would care to meet some of the inmates Members here in person, you would be more than welcome at the Meet Up on 19th June (see Meet Up thread over in the Coffee Bar).

Enjoy your stay here Smiley

 
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time_is_now
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« Reply #13 on: 12:43:12, 19-06-2008 »

Yes, Lacan can be heavy going. he once said that 'understanding' lay in the reader and that reading his text was like prospecting for gold it was meant to be very hard work for the occasional glimpse of understanding. The reader interprets his texts and derives meaning from them. I recently completed an MA thesis on the jouissance of the Other - which I find absolutely fascinating. It can help to explain behaviour like self-harming - which i was going to research further but I need the discipline to get round to it. I think High Culture is where I can experiance 'epiphany' listening to great music for example, there was a performance of Beethoven's Fifth the other day on R3 and I thought WOW! Beethoven can access the sublime unlike any other composer I know! Smiley
That paragraph seems to get further and further away from anything I recognise as Lacanian! Undecided

Welcome anyway, F-L. Est-ce que les non-dupes errent encore ?
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The city is a process which always veers away from the form envisaged and desired, ... whose revenge upon its architects and planners undoes every dream of mastery. It is [also] one of the sites where Dasein is assigned the impossible task of putting right what can never be put right. - Rob Lapsley
oliver sudden
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« Reply #14 on: 16:08:07, 19-06-2008 »

the jouissance of the Other

What does jouissance mean in English exactly? Just because its primary meaning nowadays in French as far as I know seems to me, er, yes, I'm sure you can work it out.
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