Real The Lacan Encyclopediacom
Real The Lacan Encyclopediacom
Real The Lacan Encyclopediacom
In 1953, in a lecture called "Le symbolique, l'imaginaire et le réel" (The symbolic, the
imaginary, and the real; 1982), Lacan introduced the real as connected with the imaginary
and the symbolic. The real, insofar as it is situated in relation to the death drive and the
repetition compulsion, has nothing to do with Freudian reality (Wirklichkeit ) or with the reality
principle. Lacan wrote, "One thing that is striking is that in analysis there is an entire element
of the real of the subject that escapes us. . . . There is something that brings the limits of
analysis into play, and it involves the relation of the subject to the real" (1982). Right away,
Lacan raised the question of the real in relation to analytic training, and in 1953 more
Lacan was able to extract this notion of the real from his meticulous reading of Freud. In La
relation d'objet (Object relations; 1994), his seminar of 1956-1957, Lacan, taking up the case
of "little Hans" (Freud, 1909b), explained the boy's mythical constructions as a response to the
real of sexual jouissance (enjoyment) that had erupted in his field of subjectivity. Thanks to his
imaginary constructions and his phobia, little Hans avoided the issue of castration. In his
seminar The Ego in Freud's Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis, 1954-1955
(1988), Lacan presented a detailed reading of Freud's dream of Irma's injection (Freud,
1900a). He emphasized that the terrifying image that Freud saw at the back of Irma's throat
revealed the irreducible real and designated a limit point at which "all words cease" (1988, p.
164).
Lacan returned regularly to The Interpretation of Dreams (Freud, 1900a) to indicate how the
real is located at the root of every dream, what Freud called the dream's navel, a limit point
where the unknown emerges (1900a, pp. 111n, 525). It is here, at the dream's navel, that
Lacan located the point where the real hooks up with the symbolic (Lacan, 1975). Lacan
approached the real through hallucination and psychosis by careful study of Freud's "Wolf
man" case (1918b [1914]), Freud's commentary on Daniel Paul Schreber (1911c [1910]), and
"Negation" (Freud, 1925h). If the Name of the Father is foreclosed and the symbolic function
of castration is refused by the subject, the signifiers of the father and of castration reappear in
The concept of the real also allowed Lacan to approach questions of anxiety and the
symptom in a new way. While his early teaching was devoted to the primacy of the symbolic,
in later seminars (from 1972 to 1978) he argued that the real (R), the symbolic (S), and the
imaginary (I) are strictly equivalent. In effect, the symbolism that Lacan borrowed from logic
failed to formalize the real, which "never ceases to write itself." Thus Lacan attempted, by
borrowing from the mathematics of knot theory, to invent a formulation independent of
symbols. By affirming the equivalence of the three categories R, S, and I, by representing
them as three perfectly identical circles that could be distinguished only by the names they
were given, and by knotting these three circles together in specific ways (such that if any one
of them is cut, the other two are set free), Lacan introduced a new object in psychoanalysis,
the Borromean knot. This knot is both a material object that can be manipulated and a
metaphor for the structure of the subject. The knot, made up of three rings, is characterized
by how the rings (representing the real, the symbolic, and the imaginary) interlock and
In the final years of his teaching, Lacan took up the question of the symptom and the end of
the treatment (1975; 1976). If the symptom is "the most real thing" that subjects possess
(1976, p. 41), then how must analysis proceed to aim at the real of the symptom in order to
ensure that the symptom does not proliferate in meaningful effects and even to eliminate the
symptom? For analysis not to be an infinite process, for it to find its own internal limit, the
analyst's interpretation, which bears upon the signifier, must also reach the real of the
symptom, that is, the point where the symbolically nonmeaningful latches on to the real,
where the first signifiers heard by the subject have left their imprint (Lacan, 1985, p. 14).
According to Lacan, to reach its endpoint, an analysis must modify the relationship of the
subject to the real, which is an irreducible whole in the symbolic from which the subject's
fantasy and desire derive.
This notion of the real has given rise to numerous misunderstandings. Some have interpreted
its resistance to formalization as a slide into irrationality. Others, by identifying the real with
trauma, have made it a cause of fear and anxiety. Yet we all have an intuitive experience of
the real in such phenomena as the uncanny, anxiety, the nonmeaningful, and poetic humor
Martine Lerude
See also: Fantasy, formula of; Foreclosure; Fragmentation; Imaginary, the; Internal/external
reality; Knot; Object a ; Real, Symbolic, and Imaginary father; Signifier; Subject's castration;
Symbolic, the; Symptom/sinthome.
Bibliography
Freud, Sigmund. (1900a). The interpretation of dreams. SE, 4: 1-338; 5: 339-625.
——. (1918b [1914]). From the history of an infantile neurosis. SE, 17: 1-122.
——. (1976). Conférences et entretiens dans les universités nord-américaines. Scilicet, 6-7, 5-
63.
——. (1985). Geneva lecture on the symptom (Russell Grigg, Trans.). Analysis, 1, 7-26.
(Original work published 1975)
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