Édouard Pichon
Édouard Pichon | |
---|---|
Born | Sarcelles, France | 24 June 1890
Died | 20 January 1940 Paris, France | (aged 49)
Nationality | French |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Pediatrics, Linguistics, Psychoanalysis |
Édouard Pichon (24 June 1890 – 20 January 1940) was a French pediatrician, grammarian and psychoanalyst. He was born in Sarcelles and died in Paris.
Career
[edit]A distinguished and innovative grammarian,[1] Pichon was analysed by Eugénie Sokolnicka, and became a founding member of the Paris Psychoanalytic Society in 1926.[2] A member of the royalist and reactionary Action Française, Pichon represented the jingoistic strand of French psychoanalysis,[3] with his belief in "the genuine culture and the true civilization of our country...this fundamental Frenchness".[4]
Through his mixture of linguistic and psychoanalytic thinking, Pichon was a powerful influence on Jacques Lacan (as well as a practical mentor).[5] In Écrits, Lacan paid tribute to "a divination that I can attribute only to his practise of semantics...that guided him in people's dark places".[6]
Among the psychoanalytic concepts introduced by what Élisabeth Roudinesco called Pichon's "fatalist genius",[7] were those of oblatory, scotomization, and foreclosure.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ L. Waugh, Contributions to Grammatical Studies (1979) p. 180
- ^ L. Kritzman, The Columbia History of Twentieth-Century French Thought (2007) p. 98
- ^ L. Kritzman, The Columbia History of Twentieth-Century French Thought (2007) p. 507
- ^ Quoted in E. Roudinesco, Jacques Lacan (2005) p. 148-9
- ^ E. Roudinesco, Jacques Lacan and Co (1990) p. 118 and p. xiii-iv
- ^ J. Lacan, Écrits (1997) p. 108
- ^ E. Roudinesco, Jacques Lacan and Co (1990) p. 276
External links
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