000 01692cam a2200217 4500500
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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aSédat, Jacques
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aA Freudian unknown: Jouissance
260 _c2018.
500 _a92
520 _aThe notion of jouissance is virtually absent from Freudian terminology. In his observations of infantile sexuality, however, he retains the search for “satisfaction” ( Befriedigung) in infants, a satisfaction that is above all the cessation of an experience of displeasure. Freud then observes the experience of “pleasure” ( Lust) in the child as an experience that is associated at first with the “gender drive” (Geschlechtstrieb), an impulse anterior to the sexual drive ( Sexualtrieb). The gender drive has long been ignored by translators, who have unduly assimilated the sexual drive, whereas the gender drive precedes the latter in the construction of the body of the child and in his/her quest for identity. The power drive that the child then engages in can lead him/her to seek out jouissance—albeit in the form of assuming power over the other—before being able to define and accept him/herself as a being separated from the mother, an autonomous being in the elaboration of his/her own body.
690 _asatisfaction (Befriedigung)
690 _agender drive (Geschlechtstrieb)
690 _aInfantile sexuality
690 _apleasure
690 _asexual drive (Sexualtrieb)
786 0 _nFigures de la psychanalyse | o 36 | 2 | 2018-09-27 | p. 25-35 | 1623-3883
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-figures-de-la-psy-2018-2-page-25?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c488449
_d488449