The analyst outside the consulting room. Interview with Antonio Di Ciaccia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24215/2422572Xe122Keywords:
analyst, device, society, institutionAbstract
In order to try to better understand what a Lacanian-oriented institution is all about, I asked Antonio Di Ciaccia, the first to set up an institution entirely based on Lacanian analytical logic, an institution that is based on the teaching of Freud and Lacan, according to the reading orientation offered by Jacques Alain Miller, for an interview. Obviously, I am talking about "Antenne 110". This is not an interview motivated by the desire to understand what is done in such an institution, but rather an interview that deals with a much broader spectrum, because it is based on the desire to understand what articulation, if any, exists between the analyst, the analytic device, society and the institution.
Downloads
Metrics
References
Lacan, J. (1967/2001). Allocution sur les psychoses de l’enfant. En Autres écrits. Seuil.
Lacan J. (1957/2004). Il Seminario, Libro V, Le formazione dell’inconscio 1957-1958. Einaudi.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Authors who publish in this journal accept the following conditions:
- Authors retain the copyright and assign the right of first publication to the journal, with the work registered under a Creative Commons attribution license (CC-BY), which allows third parties to use what is published whenever they mention the authorship of the work and the first publication in this magazine.
- Authors can make other independent and additional contractual agreements for the non-exclusive distribution of the article published in this journal (e.g., include it in an institutional repository or publish it in a book) as long as they clearly indicate that the work was published for the first time in this magazine.
- Authors are allowed and encouraged to publish their work on the Internet (e.g., on institutional or personal webpages) before and during the review and publication process, as it can lead to productive exchanges and greater and faster dissemination of published work (see The Effect of Open Access ).