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  1. Kant with Sade. JACQUES LACAN. TRANSLATED BY JAMES B. SWENSON, JR. This text should have served as a preface to Philosophy in the Bedroom. It. appeared in the journal Critique (no. 191, April 1963) as a review of the. edition of the works of Sade for which it was destined.*

  2. Kant with Sade is an essay by Jacques Lacan in which the author examines a link between the works of Immanuel Kant and Marquis de Sade. The original ( French : Kant avec Sade ) was published in the journal Critique in April 1963.

    • France
    • 1963
    • Kant avec Sade
    • James B. Swenson, Jr.
  3. Slavoj Zizek. Of all the couples in the history of modern thought (Freud and Lacan, Marx and Lenin...), Kant and Sade is perhaps the most problematic: the statement "Kant is Sade" is the "infinite judgement" of modern ethics, positing the sign of equation between the two radical opposites, i.e. asserting that the sublime disinterested ethical ...

  4. The most detailed commentary on Lacan's 'Kant with Sade' essay to date. Offers insight into work only translated into English in 2006. Written by a world expert in Lacanian theory. Unpacks the dense and often seemingly impenetrable nature of Lacan's language and style. Part of the book series: The Palgrave Lacan Series (PALS) 10k Accesses.

    • Dany Nobus
  5. One might think that Kant is under pressure from what he hears too closely, not from Sade, but from some mystic nearer to home, in the sigh which stifles what he glimpses beyond having seen that his God is faceless: Grimmigkeit? Sade says: Being-Supreme-in-Wickedness. Pshaw! Schwarmereien, black swarms, we expel you in order to return to the ...

  6. Kant and Sade. Despite his evident interest in phenomenology and ethics, Lacan remained strangely silent on the work of Levinas; so too, Levinas has repeatedly dismissed the insights of psychoanalysis into the structure of subjectivity and the Other as merely "psycholo-gistic." But it is precisely as modern "neighbors," both strange and

  7. 9. Aug. 2017 · Nobus elucidates how, in the third section of his essay ‘Kant with Sade’, Lacan arrives at the conclusion that Kant’s categorical imperative returns as an ethical maxim in the philosophical disquisitions of Sade’s libertine heroes.