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It is associated, rather, with both fear and jouissance.
The Dionysian dream of total pleasure - jouissance - is actually impossible.
The site, the cue, for jouissance, shifted to the unspeakable.
A term called "jouissance" is used to describe abjection.
The real source of jouissance is the repetitive movement of this closed circuit.
Repetitive music has also been linked with Lacanian jouissance.
This feminine jouissance is ineffable, for both women and men may experience it but know nothing about it.
'Jouissance' transgresses this law and, in that respect, it is beyond the pleasure principle.
They were intended to communicate ecstasy or jouissance.
Lacan also linked jouissance to the castration complex, and to the aggression of the death drive.
Drives do not represent the reproductive function of sexuality but only the dimension of jouissance.
He uses the term "jouissance" to refer to the lost object or feeling of absence which a person believes to be unobtainable.
It is music's compromise with language, whereby an audience is momentarily deprived of its jouissance.
At the end, he found himself sitting once more in the Inn of Bonne Jouissance.
I have never heard of the Inn of Bonne Jouissance.
In Žižek's terms, the pleasure of the familiar is rendered the jouissance of interrupted drives.
Those for instance, who know about Phoebe as diakanos but have never heard of jouissance will benefit from the first five chapters, and vice versa.
In his best known work Goce Jouissance.
Beyond this limit, pleasure becomes pain, and this "painful principle" is what Lacan calls jouissance.
Lacan considered that jouissance is essentially phallic, meaning that it does not relate to the "Other" as such.
In the book, Barthes divides the effects of texts into two: plaisir (translated as "pleasure") and jouissance.
I turned first to the music, and marvelled once again at its unbridled joy, its jouissance, it's sheer exuberant energy.
Herpractice is presented as an example of feminine jouissance in orderto show how this can contribute to Australia's future culturaltransitions.
But the pleasure he seeks, and offers, is finally more textual than sexual, the literary delight that Roland Barthes called jouissance.