Inconsciente e linguagem: uma leitura de Freud a Lacan

This research presents a reading of the concept of the unconscious as proposed by the texts of Freud and Lacan. We seek to investigate how the notion of “unconscious structured like a language” proposed by Jacques Lacan in his return to Freud contributes to a subversion of the concept of the unconsc...

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Bibliographic Details
Author: Caselli, Francisco Rafael Barbosa
Format: master thesis
Status:Published version
Publication Date:2014
Country:Brasil
Institution:Universidade Federal de Alagoas (UFAL)
Repository:Repositório Institucional da Universidade Federal de Alagoas (UFAL)
Language:Portuguese
OAI Identifier:oai:www.repositorio.ufal.br:riufal/1220
Online Access:http://www.repositorio.ufal.br/handle/riufal/1220
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Freud
Lacan
Inconsciente
Linguagem
Estruturalismo
Unconscious
Language
Structuralism
CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA
Description
Summary:This research presents a reading of the concept of the unconscious as proposed by the texts of Freud and Lacan. We seek to investigate how the notion of “unconscious structured like a language” proposed by Jacques Lacan in his return to Freud contributes to a subversion of the concept of the unconscious in the psychoanalytic field. In the meantime, we highlight the points of bonding and rupture between the perspectives of both authors to mark the effects of Lacan’s proposal of a structured unconscious on the matter of ontology. For such, this research introduces the concept of paradigm according to T. Kuhn, indicating the effects of the Linguistic Turn in the paradigm of language to which Lacanian psychoanalysis is linked. Then, it presents the reading strategy used in this investigation in a dialogue with the field of research in psychoanalysis. From this point on, the concept of the unconscious is approached in three stages. The first one addresses Freud’s “Interpretation of Dreams”. The second one presents the contributions of structuralism to the notion of language as a structure. The final stage investigates Lacan’s dialogue with structuralism and points out the results of such dialogue to his concept of structure and his axiom “the unconscious is structured like a language”.