Signifying Truth: Augustine, Lacan, and a Theory of Language

In this paper, I will show how a retroactive reading of Augustine by Lacan can help us understand more clearly the process of the subject’s accession to language and inter- human relations on the path toward understanding. I will distinguish the Lacanian reading from the reductive Wittgensteinian re...

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Main Author: Zachary Tavlin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2013-12-01
Series:Language and Psychoanalysis
Online Access:http://www.language-and-psychoanalysis.com//article/view/1593
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spelling doaj-5e93816f855c469c9771e569729c09552020-11-25T01:26:20ZengUniversity of EdinburghLanguage and Psychoanalysis2049-324X2013-12-0122647610.7565/landp.2013.0071593Signifying Truth: Augustine, Lacan, and a Theory of LanguageZachary Tavlin0University of WashingtonIn this paper, I will show how a retroactive reading of Augustine by Lacan can help us understand more clearly the process of the subject’s accession to language and inter- human relations on the path toward understanding. I will distinguish the Lacanian reading from the reductive Wittgensteinian reading, placing Augustine’s theory on language and learning in a broader context, particularly with regard to the process of subjectivization. Lacan explicitly read Augustine’s scenario of the jealous child in the Confessions, and devoted an early seminar to his theory of language and signification; I propose to take these readings seriously while showing that their psychoanalytic relevance extends further into Augustine’s theory of language and subjectivity than perhaps is normally recognized. Ultimately, though Lacan can help to clarify the stakes in which the linguistic subject is ontologically limited (and in which ‘corporeal’, symbolic reality is truth- deficient), this reading will help to show where Augustine’s theology has specifically informed his theory of language and its subject, and where its revisions must fail (or set out somewhere on their own).http://www.language-and-psychoanalysis.com//article/view/1593
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zachary Tavlin
spellingShingle Zachary Tavlin
Signifying Truth: Augustine, Lacan, and a Theory of Language
Language and Psychoanalysis
author_facet Zachary Tavlin
author_sort Zachary Tavlin
title Signifying Truth: Augustine, Lacan, and a Theory of Language
title_short Signifying Truth: Augustine, Lacan, and a Theory of Language
title_full Signifying Truth: Augustine, Lacan, and a Theory of Language
title_fullStr Signifying Truth: Augustine, Lacan, and a Theory of Language
title_full_unstemmed Signifying Truth: Augustine, Lacan, and a Theory of Language
title_sort signifying truth: augustine, lacan, and a theory of language
publisher University of Edinburgh
series Language and Psychoanalysis
issn 2049-324X
publishDate 2013-12-01
description In this paper, I will show how a retroactive reading of Augustine by Lacan can help us understand more clearly the process of the subject’s accession to language and inter- human relations on the path toward understanding. I will distinguish the Lacanian reading from the reductive Wittgensteinian reading, placing Augustine’s theory on language and learning in a broader context, particularly with regard to the process of subjectivization. Lacan explicitly read Augustine’s scenario of the jealous child in the Confessions, and devoted an early seminar to his theory of language and signification; I propose to take these readings seriously while showing that their psychoanalytic relevance extends further into Augustine’s theory of language and subjectivity than perhaps is normally recognized. Ultimately, though Lacan can help to clarify the stakes in which the linguistic subject is ontologically limited (and in which ‘corporeal’, symbolic reality is truth- deficient), this reading will help to show where Augustine’s theology has specifically informed his theory of language and its subject, and where its revisions must fail (or set out somewhere on their own).
url http://www.language-and-psychoanalysis.com//article/view/1593
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