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    <title>Savoirs et clinique | Cairn.info</title>
    <icon>https://shs.cairn.info/build/assets/cairn-B7RWiji2.png</icon>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:rss/revue/E_SC</id>
    <rights>Cairn.info 2026</rights>

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    <updated>2025-09-25T00:00:00+02:00</updated>

                <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_033</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Sisters and friends: The psychoanalysis of young girls
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2025/2 n° 33)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-clinique-2025-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-09-15T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2025-09-25T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[<p>Dans la psychanalyse, on a plus parlé des frères que des
sœurs&#160;: Dans Totem et Tabou (Freud, 1913), la rivalité
mortelle des fils du père de la horde primitive les conduit à tuer
le père pour se partager ses femmes et y renoncer finalement pour
coexister dans un ordre phallique et policé. Il n’y est pas
question des sœurs qui font partie des femmes ainsi possédées.
Lacan a souligné l’<i>invidia</i> du complexe fraternel ou
d’intrusion, notamment de l’aîné vis-à-vis du cadet, et on peut
supposer que cela concerne aussi les filles. Mais existe-t-il une
théorie spécifique de la sororité, distincte de celle de la
rivalité ou de l’invidia&#160;? Certes, on peut s’appuyer sur
l’idée du «&#160;pas-tout&#160;» phallique de la féminité chez
Lacan pour en déduire des spécificités de celle-ci et de l’amitié
féminine. Des féministes, refusant la référence au phallus,
proposent d’autres abords dont nous souhaitons débattre&#160;: se
passer des hommes en révélant l’homosexualité refoulée de
chacune&#160;; la référence accentuée à la maternité&#160;; la
généralisation de l’identification hystérique...</p>
]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 2 to 6| Front matter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 11| Editorial
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 12 to 21| I dreamt of Another world: Can sisterhood create social cohesion?
                                            |  Claude-Noële Pickmann
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 22 to 30| From the crowd to sisterhood: Psychoanalysis of the
groups&#160;–&#160;fascists and feminists
                                            |  Silvia Lippi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 38| Conditions for the possibility of a sexual heterology
                                            |  Sophie Mendelsohn
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 39 to 47| Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë: The call of writing
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 48 to 58| Therese of Lisieux and the Martin sisters
                                            |  Marie-Amélie Roussille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 59 to 68| Anne, sister Anne… Ancients and Moderns
                                            |  Éric Le Toullec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 78| Gabrielle and Jeanne, daughters of exception
                                            |  Geneviève Trichet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 79 to 87| Sisterly jealousy
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 88 to 90| “Home”
                                            |  Darian Leader,  Diane Scott
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 91 to 98| The distorted and distorting mirror of <i>Entstellung</i>
                                            |  Kelly Poracchia,  Mohammed Ham
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 99 to 100| Cheeroscope
                                            |  Thadée Arturo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 105| Chantal Akerman’s films: Silence and solitude
                                            |  Ute Mueller-Spiess,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 106 to 108| When sisterhood turns deadly
                                            |  Sophie Gaulard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 116| Mirror and blood sisters: Three films
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 118| Jan Horst Keppler, <i>Économie de marché et inconscient. La pulsion
à l’origine de la valeur économique</i>. Paris, Classiques Garnier,
2024
                                            |  Timothée Verley
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 119 to 120| Adrien Cascarino, <i>Scarifications. L’adolescent, les parents et
les soignants face à l’insupportable</i>. Toulouse, érès, coll. “La
vie devant eux”, 2024
                                            |  Sophie Gaulard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 120 to 121| Nicolas Demorand, <i>Intérieur nuit</i>. Paris, Les Arènes, 2025
                                            |  Hélène Coesnon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 121 to 123| Benito Pérez Galdós, <i>Fortunata &amp; Jacinta</i>. Translated by
Sadi Lakhdari. Paris, Éditions du Cherche Midi, 2024
                                            |  Marie-Amélie Roussille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 124| Yann Diener, <i>La mâchoire de Freud</i>. Paris, Gallimard, coll.
“L’Arpenteur”, 2024
                                            |  Mohamed Nechaf
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 124 to 125| Adrien Klajnman, <i>Lacan et le «&#160;moment
Clérambault&#160;».</i> Paris, Chryséis Éditions, 2024
                                            |  Claudine Biefnot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 126| Fabrice Bourlez, <i>Tacts. Remanier la psychanalyse avec les
féministes et les queers</i>. Paris, Puf, 2025
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 127 to 136| Back matter
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_032</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Ungender me!
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2025/1 nº32)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[Artistic, psychoanalytical, and political issues]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-clinique-2025-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2025-03-13T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2025-02-26T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[Dans les années 1980, les mouvements camp ou queer déconstruisaient
les normes esthétiques du genre, proclamant l’« ambiguïté sexuelle
» (G. Morel). Loin de la « destinée anatomique » et du « roc
biologique » (S. Freud), loin des « logiques binaires » (G.
Deleuze), des artistes, des théoriciens et des cliniciens repensent
aujourd’hui les rôles et les territoires pour sortir d’une identité
séparée, d’une « vérité » du sexe attendue qui limitent nos
perceptions. Le « genre » devient un repère qui a modifié notre
manière de penser. L’identité trans comme « acte », le travail de
mise en lumière de la plasticité du genre et de ses possibles
usages identificatoires dans les champs de la psychanalyse et de
l’art créent de véritables brèches dans les totems de pensée.
Changer de genre et de sexe peut être un parcours de survie pour le
sujet, une question de vie et de mort dans notre époque de crise du
long terme. L’appel injonctif « Dégenrez-moi ! » se fait l’écho
d’un profond désir de découvrir des plasticités psychiques et
corporelles rendant possibles des refontes théoriques et pratiques
émancipatrices.]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 2 to 6| Front matter
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 12| Editorial
                                            |  Lucile Charliac,  Clara Joly,  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 21| Androgyny in Virginia Woolf’s works
                                            |  Corinne Rondeau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 22 to 30| Susanna and the first American transgender network: photography and
collective identity
                                            |  Isabelle Bonnet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 38| Gender, Tarot, techno shamanism and politics, from Niki de Saint
Phalle to Paul B.&#160;Preciado
                                            |  Évelyne Toussaint
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 39 to 48| Gender and image: the foundations of a dialectic
                                            |  Walter Gerbin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 49 to 60| There is more than one sex and less than two
                                            |  Alenka Zupancic,  Charlotte Szász
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 70| The #MeToo movement: Gender, law and politics
                                            |  Marcela Iacub
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 81| The sex of mystics. Simone de Beauvoir and Jacques Lacan
                                            |  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 82 to 90| Modesty as <i>tact</i>ics. Rereading <i>Herculine Barbin</i> to
break out of bio political strategies
                                            |  Fabrice Bourlez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 91 to 96| Does to degenerate offer a solution to gender aporias?
                                            |  Patricia Gherovici
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages I to XVI| Photographs
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 97 to 105| Does death have a gender
                                            |  Sophie Mendelsohn
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 106 to 112| The roots of transphobia
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 113 to 124| David Cronenberg’s M.&#160;Butterfly (1993): An intersectional
reading of gender relations
                                            |  Caroline San Martin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 131| “Out Damned Spot! Out!” Toward a perpetual attempt at
self-indetermination
                                            |   Gral
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 132 to 136| Freezing phases of transformation of bodies. An interview of
Cassils by Patricia Gherovici and Diane Watteau
                                            |  Cassils ,  Patricia Gherovici,  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 138| Silvia Lippi, Patrice Maniglier. <i>Sœurs, pour une psychanalyse
féministe</i>, Paris, Le Seuil, 2023
                                            |  Franck Dehon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 138 to 140| Françoise Dolto. <i>Les voix de l’enfance. Œuvres choisies</i>,
Paris, Gallimard, coll. “Quarto”, 2023
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 140 to 142| Pierre Bayard. <i>Œdipe n’est pas coupable</i>, Paris, Les Éditions
de Minuit, 2021
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 142 to 145| Geneviève Morel. <i>Tueuses. Du crime au féminin&#160;: clinique,
faits divers et thrillers</i>, Toulouse, érès, coll. “Point Hors
Ligne”, 2024
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 145 to 146| Markos Zafiropoulos. <i>Lacan presque queer</i>, Toulouse, érès,
coll. “Entre les lignes”, 2023
                                            |  Geneviève Trichet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 146 to 148| Pamela King. <i>Lacan et l’American way of life. Ego psychology,
Wilhelm Reich, gender studies,</i> Presses universitaires de
Rennes, 2024
                                            |  Antoine Verstraet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 148 to 149| Slavoj Žižek. <i>Comment lire Lacan</i>, Caen, Éditions Nous, 2023
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 149 to 151| Pierre Niedergang. <i>Vers la normativité queer</i>, Toulouse,
Éditions Blast, 2023
                                            |  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 152 to 160| Back matter
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_031</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Sublimation and symptom
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2024/2 n° 31)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-clinique-2024-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2024-09-18T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2024-10-02T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
                <summary type="html"><![CDATA[« La sublimation comme le symptôme sont tous deux des concepts
indispensables de la psychanalyse. On ne peut pas substituer le
sinthome lacanien à la sublimation. Il serait toutefois tout aussi
erroné de penser que la sublimation serait un processus normal
quand le sinthome ne serait qu'une structure pathologique. L'essai
de Freud sur Léonard démontre que la sublimation ne permet pas
toujours d'éviter le symptôme ou l'inhibition. Tant la sublimation
que le sinthome vont au-delà du principe de plaisir. Mais la
différence entre eux réside dans le fait que la sublimation aborde
le réel avec l'aide du semblant, tandis que le sinthome fait déjà
partie du réel. Le sinthome, inventé par Lacan, est la preuve de
l'urgence de l'art face non seulement au malaise mais aussi au
danger dans la civilisation. » (Franz Kaltenbeck, L'écriture
mélancolique. Kleist, Stifter, Nerval, Foster Wallace, introduit et
édité par Geneviève Morel, Point Hors Ligne, érès, Toulouse, 2020,
p. 209)]]></summary>
        <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 12| Editorial
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 21| The art-symptom
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 22 to 33| Émile, the autobiographical novel
                                            |  Geneviève Trichet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 34 to 42| Robin Hood, sublimation or symptom in a case of psychose
                                            |  Marie Thaury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 52| “Being at school is like dying”. The child with the Rubik’s cube, a
case of school phobia
                                            |  Franck Dehon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 64| Nicolas de Staël, the urgency of painting
                                            |  Brigitte Lemonnier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 73| Rossini, a song that lightens the weight of words
                                            |  Roberto Cavasola
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 74 to 83| An inexhaustible sublimating writing. The novels of Philippe Forest
                                            |  Claudine Biefnot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 84 to 94| Sublimation in Sade’s political philosophy
                                            |  Marcela Iacub
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 104| Examples of sublimation in the face of Doomsday’ anxiety
                                            |  Renata Salecl
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 113| Identity, politics, desire
                                            |  Alenka Zupancic
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 114 to 123| The law of the mother. Reflexions on a feminist psychoanalytic
legal theory
                                            |  Cécile Huber
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 124 to 130| Heroin and its relations to <i>Eros</i> in the field of psychosis
                                            |  Charlotte Collet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 138| The parallax of <i>Tár</i>
                                            |  Slavoj Žižek
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 138 to 140| <i>Showing Up</i>. About Kelly Reichardt’s movie (USA, 2023)
                                            |  Sophie Gaulard,  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 140 to 143| <i>The Fabelmans</i>. About Steven Spielberg’s movie (2023)
                                            |  Marie-Amélie Roussille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 146| <i>Barbie</i>. About Greta Gerwig’s movie (USA, 2023)
                                            |  Geneviève Trichet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 147 to 150| Felicia Gordon, <i>Constance Pascal (1877-1937). Une pionnière de
la psychiatre française</i>, Paris, Des Femmes, 2023
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 150 to 152| Jean-Michel Rabaté, <i>Lacan l’irritant</i>, Paris, Éditions
Stilus, coll. “Résonances”, 2023
                                            |  Mathieu Jung
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 152 to 155| Claudine Hunault, <i>Je me petit-suicide au chocolat</i>, Paris, Le
nouvel Attila, 2023
                                            |  Julien Jalia
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 155 to 158| Reiner Stach, <i>Kafka, tome 1. Le temps des décisions</i>,
published by S. Fischer Verlag in 2002, translated from the German
by Régis Quatresous, Paris, Le Cherche midi, 2023
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 159 to 160| Laurie Laufer, Serge Hefez, <i>Questions de genre. Un dialogue
entre Laurie Laufer &amp; Serge Hefez</i>, Paris, Éditions
d’Ithaque, coll. “Expériences psychanalytiques”, 2022
                                            |  Sylvie Nève
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 160 to 162| Renata Salecl, <i>La passion de l’ignorance</i>. Translated from
the English by Patrick Boulard Paris, Stilus, “Résonances”
collection, 2023
                                            |  Isabelle Poggi,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 162 to 166| Juan Pablo Lucchelli, <i>Ce que Lacan doit à Lévi-Strauss</i>,
Presses universitaires de Rennes, “Clinique psychanalytique et
psychopathologie” collection, 2022
                                            |  Geneviève Trichet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 166 to 170| Caroline Eliacheff, Céline Masson, <i>La fabrique de
l’enfant-transgenre</i> , Paris, Éditions de l’Observatoire, 2022
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 170 to 172| <i>Mère folle</i>, (1998) Françoise Davoine Toulouse, érès,
Arcanes, coll. “Hypothèses”, 2023
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_030</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Children’s envies
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2022/1 No 30)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2022-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2023-10-04T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2023-10-18T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 11| Editorial
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 12 to 19| Longing to know, or children’s sexual curiosity
                                            |  Marie-Amélie Roussille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 20 to 26| The topicality of penis envy
                                            |  Claude-Noële Pickmann
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 27 to 37| Mila, the desire for another body
                                            |  Geneviève Trichet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 38 to 48| When love is not enough. Case study of a child’s treatment
                                            |  Claudine Biefnot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 49 to 57| Drooling with envy
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 58 to 68| Art envy
                                            |  Renata Salecl
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 69 to 72| The self-portrait, self or self-image?
                                            |  Claire Boedts
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 83| From the envy of the youngest son to the jealousy of Chateaubriand
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 84 to 94| They should have been born sooner! Environmental disaster and
intergenerational envy
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 101| Wokeism: A way to go on sleeping
                                            |  Slavoj Žižek
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 102 to 111| Psychoanalysis and politics: A standpoint
                                            |  Diane Scott
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 112 to 119| Superego versus fair play: An essay on a politics of psychoanalysis
                                            |  Lutz Goetzmann
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 120 to 124| A history of violence. Account of my interview with Léon
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 128| Jules, “It’s not easy”
                                            |  Mohamed Nechaf
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 129 to 132| About <i>Minnie and Moskowitz</i> by John Cassavetes
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 132 to 134| About <i>We Are From There</i> by Wissam Tanios
                                            |  Mohamed Nechaf
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 135 to 138| Octave Mannoni. <i>Je sais bien, mais quand même…</i> Paris, Le
Seuil, 2022
                                            |  Olivier Gaignard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 138 to 139| Renata Salecl. <i>Courir sur place. Le sujet otage du
néolibéralisme</i>. Paris, Stilus, 2023
                                            |  Sophie Mendelsohn
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 140 to 141| Monique David-Ménard. <i>La vie sociale des choses. L’animisme et
les objets</i>. Lormont, Le bord de l’eau, coll. “Totem et tabou”,
2020
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 144| Gisèle Chaboudez. <i>Féminismes et féminités. Le tout et le pas
tout</i>. Toulouse, érès, 2022
                                            |  Marie-Amélie Roussille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 144 to 146| Solal Rabinovitch. <i>Les paroles restent. Conversations en
psychanalyse avec Nils Gascuel et Marie-Jeanne Sala</i>, Toulouse,
érès, coll. “Scripta”, 2023
                                            |  Sophie Gaulard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 146 to 148| Bénédicte Vidaillet. <i>Pourquoi nous voulons tuer Greta. Nos
raisons inconscientes de détruire le monde</i>. Toulouse, érès,
2023
                                            |  Vincent Le Corre
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 148 to 150| François Olivennes. <i>Mille et un bébés, mes histoires
extraordinaires de maternité</i>. Paris, Grasset, 2022
                                            |  Hélène Coesnon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 150 to 152| Philippe Forest. <i>Déconstruire, reconstruire. La querelle du
woke</i>. Paris, Gallimard, 2023
                                            |  Claudine Biefnot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 152 to 155| Jean-Michel Rabaté. <i>Lacan l’irritant</i>. Paris, Éditions
Stilus, coll. “Résonances”, 2023
                                            |  Antoine Verstraet
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_029</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Writing and psychoanalysis
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2021/2 No 29)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[On <i>L’écriture mélancolique</i> and <i>La psychanalyse depuis
Beckett</i>]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2021-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2022-09-28T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2022-10-17T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 15| Editorial
                                            |  Lucile Charliac,  Sibylle Guipaud,  Geneviève Morel,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 16 to 24| Melancholic crimes: Franz Kaltenbeck’s contribution
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 33| Two forms of melancholy
                                            |  Darian Leader
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 34 to 45| “Dying is an art, like everything else. I do it exceptionally
well.” Sylvia Plath, “Lady Lazarus”
                                            |  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 46 to 55| Humbling and melancholy: Acting out and passage to the act in
<i>The Humbling</i> by Philip Roth
                                            |  Michael Meyer zum Wischen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 56 to 72| Ovid and Leopardi: Two cases of pre-modern melancholy writing
                                            |  Mercedes Blanco
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 84| Satire and melancholia: When the dead speak…
                                            |  Éric Le Toullec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 92| A posthumous response to Franz Kaltenbeck: On the melancholy of
David Foster Wallace
                                            |  Béatrice Pire
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 93 to 103| Explaining the inexplicable: Reading Kafka with Franz Kaltenbeck
                                            |  Jean-Michel Rabaté
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 104 to 113| Lucile, the pulchritude of a dead world
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 114 to 122| Enunciation and repetition in <i>A Piece of Monologue / Solo</i>. A
path for reflection prompted by Franz Kaltenbeck
                                            |  Llewellyn Brown
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 130| Apathy, trauma, and war
                                            |  Renata Salecl
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 140| The push-to-the-woman as a “clinical belvedere"
                                            |  Patricia Gherovici
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 148| The question of the “clinicity” of psychoanalytic case writing:
From Freud’s cases to child psychoanalysis
                                            |  Marie Lenormand
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 149 to 157| Lou Andreas-Salomé, the moment of truth: An interview with Franz
Kaltenbeck
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck,  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 158 to 168| An artist and his theory of money
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 169 to 175| Melancholia from mother to daughter: An account of my interview
with Elsa
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 176 to 183| <i>Vous ne désirez que moi</i>
                                            |  Diane Watteau,  Frédéric Yvan,  Claire Simon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 183 to 187| <i>Melancholia</i>. About the film by Lars von Trier (2011)
                                            |  Marie-Amélie Roussille,  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 188 to 192| Sabine Prokhoris. <i>Le mirage #MeToo, réflexions à partir du cas
français</i>. Paris, Le Cherche Midi, 2022
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 192 to 194| Gérard Pommier. <i>Racine cubique du crime. Incestes</i>. Paris,
Éditions Stilus, 2022
                                            |  Marie-Amélie Roussille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 194 to 198| Patricia Gherovici. <i>Transgenre. Lacan et la différence des
sexes</i>. Paris, Éditions Stilus, coll. “Résonnances”, 2022
                                            |  Geneviève Trichet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 198 to 200| <i>Nouvelle revue de l’enfance et de l’adolescence</i>, n°&#160;5.
“Penser les outils numériques. De l’ombre à la créativité”.
Coordinated by Angélique Gozlan, Vincent Le Corre, Arnaud Sylla.
Paris, Éditions L’Harmattan, 2022
                                            |  Sophie Gaulard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 200 to 203| Jean-Michel Rabaté. <i>James Joyce, hérétique et
prodigue</i>&#160;Paris, Stilus, 2023
                                            |  Naomi Toth
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 203 to 206| Laurie Laufer. <i>Vers une psychanalyse émancipée. Renouer avec la
subversion</i>. Paris, La Découverte, 2023
                                            |  Diane Scott
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 206 to 208| Aurélie Pfauwadel. <i>Lacan versus Foucault. La psychanalyse à
l’envers des normes</i>. Paris, Éditions du Cerf, 2023
                                            |  Antoine Verstraet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 208 to 210| Yann Diener. <i>LQI. Notre langue quotidienne informatisée</i>.
Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 2023
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 211 to 212| Tribute to Martine Vers (1956–2022)
                                            |  Thérèse Hulot,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 213 to 213| Tribute to Néstor A. Braunstein (1941–2022)
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_028</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Masks and masquerades
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2021/1 No 28)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2021-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2021-10-06T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2021-10-21T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 14| Editorial
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville,  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 24| Flesh masks
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 32| The failure of the mask in the experience of melancholy
                                            |  Marie Thaury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 44| Dorante, a screen that unveils
                                            |  Geneviève Trichet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 52| Letting go, or the sweet hereafter?
                                            |  Pascal Lec’hvien
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 64| Crafting one’s body in techno-trans mode
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 73| Cindy Sherman or La Roberte (she is too many to be one)
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 74 to 83| Chateaubriand, the splendid actor of <i>Memoirs from Beyond the
Grave</i>
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 84 to 93| Sammy, a dictator child II. The dictations
                                            |  Marie Lenormand
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 94 to 104| A new framework for art practice in hospital
                                            |  Céline Masson,  Xavier Gassmann,  Anne Perret
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 114| “The real is always inapprehensible.”&#160;
                                            |  Dora Garcia,  Diane Watteau,  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 123| Portrait of the obsessional as a young man, actor, and impostor:
Goethe and the curse of desire
                                            |  Alexis Lussier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 124 to 130| <i>“…the demoniac character of the repetition compulsion…”</i>
Mallarmé’s “The Demon of Analogy,” interpreted through Rolf
Brinkmann’s <i>Schnitte</i>
                                            |  Eckhard Rhode
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 143| Situating oneself through writing: <i>Née quelque part</i> (Born
Somewhere), by Michèle Halberstadt. An interview with Michèle
Halberstadt
                                            |  Michèle Halberstadt,  Diane Watteau,  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 144 to 152| “I am the family dog”: A clinical interview with Raoul
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 159| Midas’ tears. On <i>The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant</i>, By R.W.
Fassbinder
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 160 to 168| Franz Kaltenbeck. <i>L’écriture mélancolique. Kleist, Stifter,
Nerval, Foster Wallace.</i> Toulouse, érès, coll. «&#160;Point hors
ligne&#160;», 2020
                                            |  Michael Meyer zum Wischen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 168 to 170| Darian Leader. <i>La jouissance, vraiment&#160;?</i> Paris, Stilus,
coll. «&#160;Nouages&#160;», 2020
                                            |  Isabelle Baldet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 170 to 172| Alain Abelhauser. <i>Un doute infini. L’obsessionnel en 40
leçons</i>. Paris, Le Seuil, 2020
                                            |  Antoine Verstraet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 172 to 174| Catherine Millot. <i>Un peu profond ruisseau…</i> Paris, Gallimard,
coll. L’Infini, 2021
                                            |  Lucile Charliac
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 174 to 177| Marilia Aisenstein. <i>Désir, douleur, pensée. Masochisme
originaire et théorie psychanalytique</i>. Paris, Ithaque, 2020
                                            |  Julien Jalia
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 179| Clotilde Leguil. <i>Céder n’est pas consentir. Une approche
clinique et politique du consentement</i>. Paris, Puf, 2021
                                            |  Mohamed Nechaf
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 181| Bruno Nassim Aboudrar. <i>Les dessins de la colère</i>. Paris,
Flammarion, 2021
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 181 to 185| Livio Boni, Sophie Mendelsohn. <i>La vie psychique du racisme. 1.
L’empire du démenti</i>. Paris, La Découverte, 2021
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 185 to 188| Raoul Moati. <i>Sartre et le mystère en pleine lumière</i>. Paris,
Les Éditions du Cerf, 2019
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 188 to 190| Jean-Michel Rabaté. <i>Rires prodigues. Rire et jouissance chez
Marx, Freud et Kafka</i>. Paris, Stilus, coll.
«&#160;Résonances&#160;», 2021
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 190 to 193| Sara Vassallo. <i>Le désir et la grâce, Saint Augustin, Lacan,
Pascal</i>. Paris, epel, 2020
                                            |  Marie-Amélie Roussille
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 193 to 194| Llewellyn Brown (ed.). <i>Samuel Beckett, un écrivain de
l’abstraction&#160;?</i> La Revue des lettres modernes 2020-9.
Paris, Classiques Garnier, 2020. Llewellyn Brown
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_027</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        The child-master
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2020/2 No 27)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2020-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2020-09-18T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2020-11-12T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 11| Editorial
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville,  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 12 to 20| The child-master
                                            |  Adela Fryd
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 30| Sammy, a child dictator: I. Dictatorship
                                            |  Marie Lenormand
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 31 to 37| “I can’t swallow my dirty words”:&#160;A follow-up study of a
child-tyrant in an MPI (medical pedagogical institution)
                                            |  Hélène Coesnon
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 38 to 45| The tyranny of child mobility
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 46 to 55| School refusal of teenagers
                                            |  Vonnick Guiavarc’h
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 56 to 65| The young household tyrant in <i>Memoirs from beyond the Grave</i>
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 66 to 74| How dare you?
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 75 to 84| <i>Children of the Game</i> (1929) by Jean Cocteau: Elisabeth, the
“iron virgin”
                                            |  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 92| Interview with Dirk Dobke about Dieter Roth. Dieter Roth
Foundation, Hamburg, May 4, 2019
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 93 to 101| The insignificant as a modality of alterity with Clarice Lispector
                                            |  Cristina Moreira-Marcos
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 102 to 108| A case of erotomania: The account of my interview with Héloïse
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 111| Cinema
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 112 to 141| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_026</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Frank Kaltenbeck: Psychoanalysis since Beckett
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2019/1 No 26)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2019-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2020-02-19T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2020-03-02T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 15| Introduction. Franz Kaltenbeck, a reader of Beckett
                                            |  Lucile Charliac,  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 16 to 28| Psychoanalysis since Beckett
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 29 to 39| Deciphered ecstasy
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 40 to 52| The symptom in action
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 64| “Looks like a small boy”
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 79| Accepted failure, or he who wants to does not fail
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 80 to 99| Based on Louis-René des Forêts and Samuel Beckett, writings about
old age and old age in writing
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 100 to 108| Hölderlin and the master
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 123| Two aspects of the poetry of Reinhard Priessnitz
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 124 to 128| Afterword. Reading Beckett with Franz Kaltenbeck
                                            |  Jean-Michel Rabaté
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_025</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Insomnia: Sleep, dreams, and nightmares
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2018/2 No 25)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2018-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2019-09-03T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2019-09-09T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 15| Editorial
                                            |  Lucile Charliac,  Brigitte Lemonnier,  Éric Le Toullec,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 16 to 25| Why can’t we sleep?
                                            |  Darian Leader
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 26 to 33| Things and letters in dreams
                                            |  Ariane Bazan,  Giulia Olyff,  Justine Bruxelmane
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 34 to 42| Epiphanies of the Other in Adorno’s nightmares. The sinthome in
<i>Traumprotokolle</i>
                                            |  Daisuke Fukuda
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 52| Insomnia and its literary replica as a figuration of the uncanny
                                            |  Éric Le Toullec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 59| Franz Kafka’s insomnia
                                            |  Antoine Verstraet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 60 to 70| Traumatic dreams and exiles’ nightmares
                                            |  Isabelle Baldet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 80| Crime in <i>Alias Grace</i>, a half-said truth
                                            |  Éric Le Toullec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 81 to 88| “A duty to kill”
                                            |  Brigitte Lemonnier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 97| Alice Munro’s “A Wilderness Station”: Mythical feminine figures
associated with weaving, incest, and cannibalism
                                            |  Héliane Ventura
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 98 to 106| The feminine ideal and suicidal tendencies of a young revolutionary
American woman: The case of Susan Stern Sham
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 111| Lacan’s attention
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 112 to 113| A tribute to Franz Kaltenbeck. Tokyo, November 7, 2018
                                            |  Daisuke Fukuda
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 114 to 122| A bibliography of Franz Kaltenbeck’s works from 2000 onward
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 129| Fabian methods. On the game of chess between Murphy and Endon in
Samuel Beckett’s novel <i>Murphy</i>
                                            |  Eckhard Rhode
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 130 to 138| Command in perversion and phobia: The two sides of the “fascinum”
                                            |  Alexandre Lévy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 145| A clinical encounter with Luc
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 146 to 162| Theater, cinema, and exhibitions
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 163 to 189| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_024</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Ambitions for children. Children’s ambitions
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2018/1 No 24)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2018-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2018-09-27T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2018-10-25T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 17| Franz Kaltenbeck (1944–2018)
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 18 to 24| Editorial
                                            |  Vincent Le Corre,  Monique Vanneufville,  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 33| Name and ambition
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 34 to 42| How to cope with parental ambition? The case of Romain Gary
                                            |  Paul Audi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 55| Anxiety in children in the era of genetics
                                            |  Renata Salecl
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 56 to 63| “He will succeed like others, but in his own way”
                                            |  Aline Bourjot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 64 to 73| Marie Bonaparte’s passion for surgery. Two stories of the eye
                                            |  Daisuke Fukuda
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 74 to 80| The detours of an autistic child
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 81 to 93| A mother’s ambition at work. . . in the writing and publication of
a psychoanalysis case study: Winnicott’s <i>The Piggle</i>
                                            |  Marie Lenormand
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 94 to 102| Extensions of ambitions, from mother to daughter
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 105| Hubert Damisch (1928–2017)
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 106 to 120| Empedocles and Freud. A study on logics and language
                                            |  Federica Montevecchi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 121 to 130| Observations on the autobiographical body in psychosis. The leap in
<i>The Diary of Vaslav Nijinsky</i>
                                            |  Louis Raffinot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 131 to 140| Étienne Balibar and the issue of racism in <i>Race, Nation,
Class</i>
                                            |  Olivier Gaignard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 141 to 149| The Uncanny of the stranger
                                            |  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 150 to 155| Introduction. Why should a psychoanalytical association organize a
study day on the digital sector?
                                            |  Vincent Le Corre
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 156 to 164| Video games and robots in a psychoanalyst’s consulting room
                                            |  Frédéric Tordo
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 165 to 173| When otherness goes viral: The example of cyberbullying
                                            |  Angélique Gozlan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 174 to 179| When <i>Zelda</i> becomes a pornographic narrative medium:
Pornography and adolescence
                                            |  Marion Haza
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 180 to 183| “Psychoanalysts and digital technology: Video games, social
networks, robots, and pornography. . .” Some comments on the
interventions
                                            |  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 184 to 187| Donatien, the made man
                                            |  Antoine Verstraet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 188 to 194| Film review
                                            |  Geneviève Morel,  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 219| Reviews
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 220 to 222| Sylvie Boudailliez (1949–2017)
                                            |  Isabelle Baldet,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_023</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        What is happening to us? Psychoanalytic insights into politics
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2017/2 No 23)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2017-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2017-09-19T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2017-09-26T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 11| Editorial
                                            |  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 12 to 22| Karl Kraus faced with Hitler
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 23 to 33| <i>Mar a Logos</i>: The election of Trump and fake news
                                            |  Manya Steinkoler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 34 to 43| Toshio Shimao. From being a kamikaze to practicing “lituraterre”
                                            |  Daisuke Fukuda
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 44 to 54| French theater is worried
                                            |  Diane Scott
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 55 to 64| Is that what you want?
                                            |  Antoine Verstraet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 65 to 76| For an end to reactionary pseudo-psychoanalysis
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 77 to 79| The concept of populism: Avenues for reflection
                                            |  Diana Kamienny-Boczkowski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 80 to 89| The signifiers of Marine Le Pen
                                            |  Stéphane Wahnich
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 90 to 100| Object-subject. Preliminary observations on the reasonings of Jean
Bollack and Peter Szondi
                                            |  André Laks
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 108| Perversion and psychosis II (in “Kant with Sade” by Jacques Lacan)
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 109 to 117| Case presentation in the practice and transmission of
psychoanalysis: An analytical act
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 118 to 125| Teenagers’ bodies and transference. Tag your name or the “bang” of
the encounter
                                            |  Céline Masson
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 126 to 129| The development of a trauma
                                            |  Sylvie Boudailliez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 130 to 136| Film reviews
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 137 to 145| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_022</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Sex, Knowledge and Power
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2017/1 No 22)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2017-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2017-02-28T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2017-03-06T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 13| Editorial
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 14 to 24| Do we live in a post-phallic era?
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 33| The work of love in the age of its technical reproducibility
                                            |  Néstor A. Braunstein
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 34 to 43| The sexual domination of women
                                            |  Marcela Iacub
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 44 to 53| Nathalie St/G-R-Anger and the uncanny house of women
                                            |  Michael Meyer zum Wischen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 54 to 63| Teenagers and parental couples
                                            |  Christine Louchard Chardon,  Yves Morhain
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 64 to 76| Perversion and psychosis I. Their differences and their
interferences in Freud’s works
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 77 to 87| Don’t you touch me, or nothing’s working between sex, power, and
knowledge
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 88 to 96| The case of patient G: head injury, psychosis, and psychoanalysis
                                            |  Diana Caine
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 97 to 104| Body image and bariatric surgery
                                            |  Caroline Gault
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 105 to 114| Naturalizations: mourning and colonial violence
                                            |  Boris Chaffel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 118| “Only me”
                                            |  Aline Bourjot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 119 to 124| Film review
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 134| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_021</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Children’s Fantasies—Children of Fantasies
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2016/2 No 21)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2016-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2016-10-17T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2016-10-27T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 11| Editorial
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 12 to 20| Women who Murder in the Name of a Child
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 32| Portrait of a Poet Torn between Two Languages: Noguchi Yonejiro’s
Poetic Adventure
                                            |  Daisuke Fukuda
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 43| Infantile Neurosis, or “the Laboratory of Phantasieren”
                                            |  Marie Lenormand
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 44 to 54| “He Looks Like a Kid”
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 55 to 63| The Real of Fantasy
                                            |  Lyasmine Kessaci
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 64 to 72| The Child of Adultery and a Child at all Costs
                                            |  Sylvie Boudailliez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 73 to 82| Myth and Fantasy in a Child
                                            |  Vincent Le Corre
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 94| Terrorist Modalities of the “Passage to the Act”
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 101| Fractured Mirror Images: between Neuropsychology and Psychoanalysis
                                            |  Diana Caine
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 102 to 107| Virgilio, or Life as It Goes
                                            |  Dominique Soulès
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 108 to 119| Film and Theater Reviews
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 120 to 138| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_020</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Goodbye, Sadness!
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2016/1 No 20)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[The Psychoanalysis of Depressions and Individual and Collective
Melancholies]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2016-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2015-12-29T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2016-01-21T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 11| Editorial
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville,  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 12 to 20| The Violence of Melancholy According to David Foster Wallace, or
the Limits of Ciphering
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 21 to 32| <i>Et in melancholia ego</i>
                                            |  Sylvain Masschelier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 33 to 41| The Black Voice
                                            |  Bernard Baas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 42 to 52| Inclination to Terror
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 63| School Shootings
                                            |  Manya Steinkoler
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 64 to 71| The Master-Slave Dialectic in <i>Madame de Sade</i> by Mishima
                                            |  Daisuke Fukuda
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 72 to 82| Vladimir—It’s Not Much Fun
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 89| From the Loss of the Imaginary to Endless grief: Barthes’s way
                                            |  Magdalena Marciniak
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 90 to 95| Walter Benjamin and Cannabis
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 96 to 101| A Dead Father Who “Spoils Life”
                                            |  Diana Caine,  Denis Echard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 102 to 106| “To Be a Blacksmith”
                                            |  Sylvie Boudailliez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 110| Shonen (Boy)
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 111 to 116| Reviews
                                            |  Sibylle Guipaud,  Antoine Verstraet
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_019</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Young People: The Future Adrift?
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2015/2 No 19)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[A Challenge for Psychoanalysis]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2015-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2015-08-01T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2015-09-15T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 16| Homage to Elsa Cayat
                                            |  Isabelle Baldet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 23| Editorial
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville,  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 24 to 35| Traps for Young People
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 36 to 42| Young Psychotic Patients: Between Aimlessness and Confinement
                                            |  Kada Ouldamar
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 53| From Dawn to Dusk: Romain Gary, or Reincarnation through Writing
                                            |  Brigitte Lemonnier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 54 to 61| An “Ambiguous” Use of the Internet
                                            |  Vincent Le Corre
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 62 to 69| “He’s a Punk, but I Love Him”
                                            |  Sylvie Boudailliez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 70 to 79| The Logical Phases of the Akihabara Massacre
                                            |  Daisuke Fukuda
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 80 to 88| Gifted Children in the Family
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 89 to 96| Killing Me Softly: Autism, Language, and Representation
                                            |  Michael Turnheim
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 97 to 105| Exploitation, Alienation, and Emancipation: Marx and the Modern
Experience of Work
                                            |  Richard Sobel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 106 to 113| “No One’s Answering”: Working when Everything Could be Taken Away
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 114 to 119| On a Subjective Crisis in the Civil Service
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 120 to 129| The Humiliated and the Offended: An Ordinary Critique of Work
                                            |  Romain Huët,  Olivier Sarrouy
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 130 to 137| On the Use of the Notion of “Psychological Harassment&#160;”
                                            |  Laurent Chaine
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 138 to 142| A Woman Deceived
                                            |  Thérèse Hulot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 143 to 145| Review
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_018</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Child’s Play
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2015/1 No 18)
            ]]></title>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2015-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2015-03-06T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2015-03-16T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 12| Editorial
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 13 to 22| What is Play For?
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 23 to 31| The Question of Play in the Treatment of Children: Approaches,
Stakes, and Challenges
                                            |  Marie Lenormand
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 32 to 42| Dangerous Games: Why do Children Enjoy Playing Chicken?
                                            |  Sylvie Boudailliez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 43 to 52| A Few Aspects of the Video Gaming Experience
                                            |  Vincent Le Corre
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 60| Faked Death: Violence and Games in Hana Makhmalbaf’s Film <i>The
Notebook</i>
                                            |  Éric Le Toullec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 70| The Movement of the Line: Play Drive, Playground?
                                            |  Anne Boissière
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 75| Is Growing Old Child’s Play?
                                            |  Chantal Dalmas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 77 to 83| Another Gender: On Edouard Louis’s Autobiographical Novel <i>En
finir avec Eddy Bellegueule</i>
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 84 to 94| Adorno and Psychoanalysis
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 102| Bibliophilia against Bibliometry
                                            |  Antonio Teixeira
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 103 to 111| The Sartre Scenario
                                            |  Sylvain Masschelier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 112 to 114| A Psychotic Teenager Organizes the World through Signifiers
                                            |  Isabelle Baldet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 115 to 117| Melancholy Aspiration
                                            |  Geneviève Trichet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 118 to 123| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_017</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Cinephile Transferences
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2014/1 No 17)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[Latin-American Cinema and Psychoanalysis]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2014-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2014-11-03T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2014-12-02T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 8| Homage to Anne-Lise Stern, Psychoanalyst (1921–2013)
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 9 to 16| Editorial
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville,  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 24| “Failing to Finish”: The Peculiar Place of <i>Él</i> within
Buñuel’s Oeuvre
                                            |  Alain Bergala
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 25 to 33| The Immanence of Ripstein
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 34 to 40| What Does it Mean to be a Murderer? On Luis Buñuel’s <i>The
Criminal Life of Archibald de la Cruz</i>
                                            |  Marcela Iacub
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 41 to 51| The Mechanics of Dictatorship
                                            |  Régis Michel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 52 to 60| From Trauma to Catastrophe in the Films of Lucrecia Martel
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 66| In Praise of Folly: Tomás Gutiérrez Alea’s <i>Death of a
Bureaucrat</i>
                                            |  Nancy Berthier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 67 to 73| Death of a Bureaucrat, Death of a Father? A Psychoanalytical
Approach to Tomas Gutiérrez Alea’s <i>La Muerte de un Burócrata</i>
                                            |  Sadi Lakhdari
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 74 to 82| Cinema and Psychoanalysis: An Unthought Relation in Revolutionary
Cuban Cinema
                                            |  Julie Amiot-Guillouet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 94| The Influence of Psychoanalysis on the Teaching and Direction of
Actors in Contemporary Spanish Cinema
                                            |  Paula Ortiz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 95 to 100| Fractured Families: Albertina Carri and the Cinema of the Children
of the “Disappeared”
                                            |  Josefina Sartora
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 107| Fearing Neither God nor Man: Psychoanalysis and Cinema in Argentina
                                            |  Patricia Gherovici
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 108 to 115| <i>Neuf Reines</i> and its Psychoanalytical Truth
                                            |  Diana Kamienny-Bockzkowski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 116 to 125| From Spectres to Spectators
                                            |  Joaquín Manzi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 126 to 129| El Creciente/The Rising Tide
                                            |  Paula Markovitch
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 130 to 138| <i>El premio</i>: The Absence of the Father as Metaphor for a
Society Adrift
                                            |  Ignacio Del Valle Dávila
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 143| The Infancy of Evil
                                            |  Roberto Aceituno
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 144 to 152| The Fates of the Superego under Neoliberalism: From <i>El Chacal de
Nahueltoro</i> to <i>Pejesapo</i>
                                            |  Esteban Radiszcz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 153 to 160| The Debt: Totem, Hoax, and Fetishism
                                            |  Luiz Renato Martins
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 161 to 169| Gender Representations and Psychoanalysis in Brazilian Cinema at
the End of the Dictatorship
                                            |  Alberto Da Silva
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 170 to 178| On the&#160;Life of Speaking Beings: Sandra Werneck’s
<i>Mǝninas</i>
                                            |  Cristina Duarte-Simões
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 186| Is Glauber a Woman?
                                            |  Hervé Joubert-Laurencin
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 187 to 190| In the Silence of Illumination
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 191 to 194| <i>Jimmy P: The Psychotherapy of a Plains Indian</i> (dir. Arnaud
Desplechin)
                                            |  Isabelle Baldet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 195 to 225| Reviews
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages I to XII| Hors-texte&#160;
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_016</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Jacques Lacan, Materialist
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2013/1 No 16)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[The Symptom in Psychoanalysis, Letters, and Politics]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2013-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2013-02-01T00:00:00+01:00</published>
                <updated>2013-03-15T00:00:00+01:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 9| In Remembrance: Jean Bollack (1923–2012)
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 11 to 16| Editorial
                                            |  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 17 to 26| Lacan and the Omission of Marx’s Laughter
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 27 to 35| On the Subject of the “Materialism” of the Drive: Žižek, a Reader
of Lacan
                                            |  Bernard Baas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 36 to 46| Toward a Non-Subjectivist Theory of Subjectivity: Jacques Lacan
Reinterpreted by Michel Pêcheux
                                            |  Pascale Gillot
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 47 to 60| Lacan and Organo-dynamic Psychiatry: A Return to a Dialogue with
Henri Ey
                                            |  Ronan de Calan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 61 to 70| Lacan, Poe, and Cybernetics, or How the Symbol Learns How to Fend
for Itself
                                            |  Pierre Cassou-Noguès
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 71 to 80| Giving What Cannot Be Given: Is There a Materialism of the Gift?
                                            |  Esteban Radiszcz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 81 to 93| Stylistic Questions about the “Gongora of Psychoanalysis”
                                            |  Mercedes Blanco
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 94 to 106| Lacan, the Ironist
                                            |  Paul Audi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 115| Lacan and Sadian Materialism
                                            |  Éric Marty
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 116 to 124| Sade with Lacan. Toward the Decentering of Signifying Materiality
                                            |  Daisuke Fukuda
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 125 to 132| Lacan and the Insistence of the Letter
                                            |  Jacques Aubert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 133 to 139| The Unconscious and the Japanese Language in Lacan
                                            |  Diana Kamienny-Bockzkowski
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 140 to 151| Tuché, Clinamen, Den
                                            |  Mladen Dolar
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 152 to 159| Clinical Work with the Clinamen: Matter and Manner of the
Transsexual Nexus
                                            |  Patricia Gherovici
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 160 to 169| Give Me Your Dopamine—Your Libido
                                            |  Néstor A. Braunstein
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 170 to 178| The Moterialism of the Symptom in the Lacanian Approach to
Psychosis
                                            |  Michael Meyer zum Wischen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 179 to 189| Frauds in Forensic Medicine: The Perverse Search for Material
Evidence
                                            |  Renata Salecl
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 190 to 197| Ventriloquist Stories. Can We Interpret Contemporary Art the Way
Lacan Interpreted the Letter?
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages I to IV| Insets
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 198 to 206| Psychoanalytical Etiology in Criminology in Lacan’s Work
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 207 to 210| “Walk or Die!”
                                            |  Carine Decool
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 211 to 215| Film Critique
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 216 to 239| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_015</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Literary and Other Writings in Psychoanalysis
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2012/1 No 15)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[Psychoanalysis, Literature, Theater, and Cinema]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2012-1?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2012-04-01T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2012-04-17T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 13| Editorial
                                            |  Éric Le Toullec,  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 21| Virginia Woolf and Painters
                                            |  Jacques Aubert
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 22 to 31| Emmanuel Bove: The Man in Quicksand
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 32 to 41| From Divination to Writing: The Invention of Chinese Characters
                                            |  Léon Vandermeersch
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 42 to 52| “Between” Philosophy and Psychoanalysis: Literature as Experience
                                            |  Bernard Baas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 53 to 63| Lenz According to Büchner
                                            |  Lucile Charliac
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 64 to 73| The Agency of Love Letters in the Unconscious
                                            |  Sylvain Masschelier
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 74 to 82| A Writing Meant to Outlaw: The Design/Destiny of Letters and <i>The
Malady of Death</i>
                                            |  Michael Meyer zum Wischen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 83 to 96| Nabokov: The “Nymphome” or the “Sinthome” According to Joyce
                                            |  Pascal Bataillard
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 97 to 106| “The First Experience of Writing: An Agony”
                                            |  Sylvie Boudailliez
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 107 to 117| Tmesis—Separation, Syntax, Solitude
                                            |  Marcus Coelen
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 118 to 127| The Theme of Writing in the Letters between Lou Andreas, Anna
Freud, and Sigmund Freud
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 128 to 138| A Theater with No Couch: The Unconscious of the Stage
                                            |  Régis Michel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 139 to 150| Freud-Lubitsch, 1919: An Uncanny Gaze
                                            |  Éric Le Toullec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 151 to 156| Pillow Book, an Expression of Two Limitless Fascinations: Flesh and
Calligraphy
                                            |  Anne Ermolieff
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 157 to 167| Letters of Places, Ruins, and Figures of the Real
                                            |  Frédéric Yvan
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 168 to 176| What Is a “Modern Novel”? An Introductory Note on <i>The
Supermale</i> by Alfred Jarry
                                            |  Paul Audi
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 177 to 193| An Anthropological Fiction
                                            |  Jean Bollack
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 194 to 204| D. Foster Wallace beyond the Pleasure Principle
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 205 to 207| A Wave Goodbye for David Claerbout
                                            |  Diane Watteau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 208 to 217| The Discourse of Markets: Pest or Post Discourse? A Sixth
Discourse?
                                            |  Néstor A. Braunstein
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 218 to 224| The Violent Foundation of the Universal
                                            |  Antonio Teixeira
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 225 to 230| Melancholia, Abstraction of the Void
                                            |  Sylvette Ego
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 231 to 238| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
            <entry>
    <id>tag:cairn.info,2005:numero:E_SC_014</id>
    <title type="html"><![CDATA[
        Psychoanalysis and Psychiatry
                    | Savoirs et clinique
            (2011/2 No 14)
            ]]></title>
            <subtitle type="html">
            <![CDATA[Special Report: Psychoanalysis of Work, from Symptom to Suicide]]>
        </subtitle>
        <link href="https://shs.cairn.info/journal-savoirs-et-cliniques-2011-2?lang=en" type="text/html" rel="alternate" />
            <published>2011-10-01T00:00:00+02:00</published>
                <updated>2011-10-12T00:00:00+02:00</updated>
            <content type="html"><![CDATA[
        <ul>
                            <li>
                     Pages 7 to 13| Editorial
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville,  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 15 to 21| On the Subject of a Few Essays by a Young Psychiatrist Named
Jacques Lacan
                                            |  Franz Kaltenbeck
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 22 to 29| What Is the Future of Hospitalization?
                                            |  Pascal Lec’hvien
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 30 to 39| Paranoia: From Its Clinical Presence to Its Nosographic Vanishing
                                            |  Philippe Sastre-Garau
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 40 to 44| Medicine, Psychoanalysis, and Psychiatry
                                            |  Jean-Paul Kornobis
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 45 to 49| Cruelty and the Clinic
                                            |  Christian Müller
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 50 to 53| Community Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis
                                            |  Benjamin Weil
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 54 to 63| On the Subject of Power in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis
                                            |  Esteban Radiszcz
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 64 to 75| Madness in Hollywood: Mankiewicz, Forman, and Scorsese
                                            |  Éric Le Toullec
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 76 to 84| “Weigh Me”: The Strange Desire to Be Evaluated
                                            |  Bénédicte Vidaillet
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 85 to 87| Evaluations in Psychiatry
                                            |  Chantal Dalmas
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 88 to 93| We Didn’t Notice Anything! On the Subject of the Visibility of
Suicides and the Audibility of Symptoms in the Workplace
                                            |  Emmanuel Fleury
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 94 to 100| The Capitalist Discourse: The “Fifth Discourse”? Anticipation of
the “PST Discourse,” or Pest
                                            |  Néstor A. Braunstein
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 101 to 107| “I’d Prefer Not to&#160;.&#160;.&#160;.” A Portrait of Bartleby as
a Revolutionary
                                            |  Sylvette Ego
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 108 to 116| “Love Thy Work as Thyself”
                                            |  Geneviève Morel
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 117 to 122| At Work, You Have to Obey: “She’s My Boss and Knows Better Than
Me!”
                                            |  Monique Vanneufville
                                    </li>
                            <li>
                     Pages 123 to 130| Reviews
                                    </li>
                    </ul>
    ]]></content>
</entry>
    </feed>
