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Seminar
in english offered by Gifric in Quebec City,Canada, in collaboration with
the Circles of the Quebec Freudian School, the Chicago Study Group for the
Philosophy of Psychoanalysis and Encore (Interdisciplinary Working Group
on Freudian and Lacanian Psychoanalysis - California).
The
seminars are conducted by Gifric's psychoanalysts: Willy Apollon, Ph.D.,
Danielle Bergeron, M.D., and Lucie Cantin, M. Ps.
Summer
2007
June
4-8
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Psychoanalysis
as such, called pure psychoanalysis in Lacanian terms, is a radical
experience conducted under transference, namely love of the knowledge
(le savoir) produced by the unconscious as the foundation of a new
ethic. Such an experience, necessarily unique and linked to what is
considered to be a subjective history, is the effect of the constraint
of the analyst's desire on the subjective demand. As such, the experience
reaches an end, a logical limit overdetermined by its internal structure,
an end that is not to be confused with its finality or avowed objective,
with the end of the experience determined either by the analysand
or the analyst for reasons external to the logic of the experience.
The logic that drives such an experience to its internal limit, its
analytic end, involves something else than effects of healing and
is verifiable for the subject through supervision. The savoir produced
by such an experience is nonetheless verifiable at the conclusion
of the various processes called "of the pass" set in place
by a School to produce and collect the savoir. This is what enables
a subjective experience that is unique and thus incapable of repetition
to, on a case by case basis through control by supervision and the
pass, open onto a specific savoir applicable in the realm of the psyche
and its effects within the body, or even within the organism, for
situations in which the experience itself was absent. It is applied
psychoanalysis, the foundation of the clinic referred to as "analytic
psychotherapy", where the subject is not constrained to go through
the experience as such, but where the subject is confronted with ethical
exigencies supported by the savoir deriving from the experience.
The Gifric
clinical seminar will support this clinical practice aimed at applying
the savoir and ethic deriving from the analytic experience carried
to its logical end, to the treatment of serious or mild mental disorders
of a passing or intermittent nature as in most neuroses, or severe
and persistent disorders as in the psychoses, and that require extensive
examination and questioning of the unconscious positions in which
the disorders become rooted. The seminars are seminars of psychoanalysis
applied to mental disorders of a psychic origin whatever their severity
and effects in the organism. The disorders demonstrate blockage of
the psyche in its imaginary, behavioural, interpersonal and socio-cultural
manifestations in relation to the subject's unconscious positions
and deep-seated ethical choices.
The
clinical seminars are designed for professionals and clinicians in
the health system or in private practice who are confronted in their
work with subjects suffering from mental disorders. It is important
to maintain the distinction between mental disorders and mental illnesses.
The latter, from the standpoint of neuroscience and biological psychiatry,
or mainstream psychiatry for some, presuppose an organic affliction
specifying particular deficiencies in terms of neurological manifestations
or functioning of attention, intelligence, volition, affectivity or
psychosocial behaviour. Invariably, the preferred clinical approaches
in those perspectives essentially are focused both on the care aspect,
being centered with the organic and not with treatment, thus favouring
the symbolic given the real causes of the neurological afflictions
are not known, and on the aspects of learning, relearning to compensate
for the identified deficiencies and when indicated, re-education with
a view to the social reintegration of the persons affected.
The psychoanalytical
approach is based on a deeper symbolic causality involving the mind
itself in its taking of ethical positions that mobilize the entire
being as far as its neurophysiological rooting and genetic conditioning.
This approach relies on speech, which substantiates the radical split
between the mind, specific to humans and underlying the human's erotic,
æsthetic and ethical positions, and the psyche, which we share
with animals and which in its neurophysiological functioning supports
the psychosocial and cultural manifestations of those subjective positions.
This full speech in which the subject takes a position evokes in the
analytical clinic the confrontation with death working in the eroticism
and with the absence of any possible recourse to an Other, leaving
the human subject in total solitude as to its ethical responsibilities.
This double confrontation is where human uniqueness becomes specific,
and is the source of what psychoanalysis identifies as mental disorders
as opposed to what may be seen as mental illnesses in psychiatry held
out to be biological and therefore medical. From Freud to the present,
the analytic experience has uncovered a savoir about these disorders,
their structures and the logic of their development and action on
the individual organism, the psyche, the conscious and behaviour.
The presentation of clinical cases, the work of the participants in
clinical teams and the studies of clinical strategies ensuing from
the clinician's position are the means that allow the clinical seminar
to explore the field of the unconscious where the peculiar logic regulating
the disorders in each specific case is operating. The work of the
seminar will determine the clinician's position in regard to the client's
demand, and his or her relation to what is serving as a pretext in
that demand in order to gain access to the conscious in the transitional
crisis, to tear the imaginary in the fantasy or to impose itself on
the body or psyche through the symptom. Psychoanalysis as an applied
clinic, not unlike psychoanalysis as an experience directed under
transference, will progressively set itself up and reveal itself as
an ethical practice relying on a savoir which develops once the unconscious
has been set to work. Participating clinicians will be invited to
present cases, which are to be instrumental in uncovering the functioning
of the logic of the fantasy at the heart of the experience.
For more
informations about the program and registration, click
here
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