Presentation
The papers I present here reflect different moments of my thought
concerning, on one hand, the connections between my political life and my
social position, and on the other, the ties between these connections and my
clinical practice, itself a political stance. Between political life and
intimacy, there are numerous forms of mediation which tend to become
institutions: the family, religion, sport, culture or political parties are
expressions of this. The community formed by psychoanalysts, the
publications they produce, the place in that community occupied by
psychoanalytical societies, associations, schools or groups and what they
propose or demand, working and research groups, training analysis,
supervision, whether or not these take place inside institutions, constitute
many other expressions of such mediation. Even what we call "I", the "Ego"
or the "Self" tends to be organised by the subject as a personal
institution. Never attaining total institutionalisation, intimacy is
political : it flees institutions in a paradoxical and conflict-ridden
relationship. This is at the core of ethics.
To
Bibliography