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The Meaning of the Letter
[http://aejcpp.free.fr/lacan/1957-05-092.htm]
 
<BLOCKQUOTE>
'''Of Children in Swaddling Clothes'''<BR>
Writing is distingiushed by a prevalence of the text in the sense that this factor of discourse will assume in this essay a factor that makes possible the kind of tightening up that I like in order to leave the reader no other way out than the way in, which I prefer to be difficult. In that sense, then, this will not be writing.
Because I always try to provide my seminars each time with some. thing something new, I have refirained refrained so far from giving such a text, with one exception, which is not particularly outstanding in the context of the series, and which I refer to at all only for the general level of its argument.
For the urgency that I now take as a pretext for leaving aside such an aim only masks the difficulty that, in trying to maintain it at the level at which I ought to present my teaching here, I might push it too far from speech, whose very different techniques are essential to the formative effect I seek.
But how are we to take this 'letter' here? Quite simply, literally.
By 'letter' I designate that materia1 material support that concrete discourse borrows from language.
This simple definition assumes that language is not to be confused with the various psychical and somatic functions that serve it in the speaking subject - primarily because language and its structure exist prior to the moment at which each subject at a certain point in his mental development makes his entry into it.
Let us note, then, that aphasias, although caused by purely anatomical lesions in the cerebral apparatus that supplies the mental centre for these functions, prove, on the whole, to distribute their deficits between the two sides of the signifying effect of what we call here 'the letter' in the creation of signification. A point that will be clarified later.
Thus the subject, too, if he can appear to be the slave of language is all the more so of a discourse in the universal movement in which his place is already inscribed at birth, if only byvirtue by virtue of his proper name.
Reference to the experience of the community, or to the substance of this discourse, settles nothing. For this experience assumes its essential dimension in the tradition that this discourse itself establishes. This tradition, long before the drama of history is inscribed in it, lays down the elementary structures of culture. And these very structures reveal an ordering of possible exchanges which, even if unconscious, is inconceivable outside the permutations authorized by language.
[from Lacan's ''&Eacute;crits, ''Norton, 1977 pp. 146
159]
 
==External Links==
[[Category:Books by Jacques Lacan]]
[[Category:Jacques Lacan]]
[[Category:Works]]
 
{{Encore}} pp. 34, 65, 68
[[Category:Encore|Instance of the Letter in the Unconscious]]
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