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Judith Miller (philosopher)

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Judith Miller (French: [milɛʁ]; born 1941) is a French psychoanalyst. She is the daughter of the psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan and Sylvia Bataille. Her spouse is Lacanian Jacques-Alain Miller.

As a Maoist philosophy lecturer at Vincennes in Paris, her radicalism was used as a reason for her philosophy department to be decertified.[1] This occurred after she handed out course credit to someone she met on a bus, and subsequently publicly declared in a radio interview that the university is a capitalist institution, and that she would do everything she could to make it run as badly as possible. After this, she was demoted by the French education department to a lycée teacher.[citation needed]

Works

  • 'Métaphysique de la physique de Galilée', Cahiers pour l’Analyse 9.9 (1968)
  • Le Champ freudien à travers le monde: textes recueillis, Paris: Seuil, 1986.
  • Album Jacques Lacan: visages de mon père, Paris: Seuil, 1990
  • (with Hervé Castanet) Pierre Klossowski, la pantomime des esprits : suivi d'un entretien de Pierre Klossowski avec Judith Miller, Nantes: C. Defaut, 2007

References

  1. ^ Roudinesco, Élisabeth (1990). Jacques Lacan & Co. : a history of psychoanalysis in France, 1925-1985. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 558. ISBN 978-0-226-72997-8. Retrieved 5 February 2011. A few months later, Michele Manceaux decided to publish her interview with Judith Miller in the press. At the time, the interviewee had no reaction ... He did so, and also withdrew certification for degrees in philosophy from Vincennes. ...