01842 a2200409 4500001001100000005001700011008004100028020002200069037003600091040000700127041000800134072001600142072001500158072001500173072001400188072001500202072001600217072001400233072001300247072001300260072001200273072001300285072001400298072002100312072002100333072002100354072002100375072002100396100001700417245006700434250000600501260003200507300001000539520084500549700002301394999001501417104030147920250328151427.0250324022025GB 18 eng  a9781040301470qEA bTaylor & FranciscGBP 32.99fBB a01 aeng7 aJMAF2thema7 aJMK2thema7 aJHB2thema7 aQD2thema7 aQRA2thema7 aMKMT2thema7 aJMAF2bic7 aJMK2bic7 aJHB2bic7 aHP2bic7 aHRA2bic7 aMMJT2bic7 aPHI0050002bisac7 aPHI0400002bisac7 aPSY0260002bisac7 aPSY0360002bisac7 aSOC0510002bisac1 aJean Allouch10aNew Remarks on the Passage to the ActbLacan and the Lacanians a1 aOxfordbRoutledgec20250331 a114 p bNew Remarks on the Passage to the Act considers what happens when psychoanalysis and the social sciences are called on to help modern societies overwhelmed by unexplained violence. Jean Allouch examines key events – the crimes of the Papin sisters, Lacan’s case of Aimée and the murder of Hélène Rytmann by Louis Althusser – and unpacks the concept of the "passage to the act". The book assesses these classic cases, resorting to contemporaneous studies and literature, particularly discussing Marguerite Duras’ novel L’Amante Anglaise . The book also considers modern acts of terrorism. New Remarks on the Passage to the Act will be of great interest to clinicians, academics and scholars of psychoanalysis, Lacanian studies, sociology, cultural studies and philosophy, and to Lacanian analysts in practice and in training.1 aOscar Zentner4B06 c8598d8598