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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aBotet-Pradeilles, Georges
_eauthor
700 1 0 _a Drillon, Dominic
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aThe Ego subverted by the subject in the role of the trickster
260 _c2011.
500 _a45
520 _aBetween psychoanalysis and management, speaking of interstices is an understatement, or we could say an abyss. The purpose of this paper is to show what spaces of freedom and action can be created if they are brought into dialogue. Lacan said using one of his jokes: “When I am, I do not think myself,” paraphrasing Descartes. The trickster is not in the position of his masters, to whom it is important to dominate, control, know, possess, and seduce. He is indifferent to hierarchical and territorial gains, and drives his malicious game through invention, pleasure, and adventure. His subjective adjustment gives him a plasticity that gradually becomes his nature, making the lesson of comedy pleasant and necessary. The Ego in its schemes, its conditions, all the materialities and interiorized peripheral constraints that constitute it, fades away to leave place for a new vision, a new statement, an emergence that surprises and invents a new functioning. Piaget saw in this the accommodation process that brings organic or intelligent life to new “optimizing” equilibration. The search for buried larvae required some of Darwin’s finches to develop a finer beak. The ruse of evolution gave it to them through its secret game, which provides the means to the ends without any help of a conscience.
690 _agame
690 _aMoi
690 _aself
690 _ajeu
690 _amanagement
690 _apsychoanalysis
690 _apsychanalyse
786 0 _nRevue internationale de Psychosociologie | XVII | 43 | 2011-09-25 | p. 191-211 | 1260-1705
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-internationale-de-psychosociologie-2011-43-page-191?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c568704
_d568704