Abstract
This article recovers the relationship between psychoanalysis and discourse analysis to review lines of study that the theory of the unconscious contributes to language studies. It stops at Pêcheux and explores the ways in which Lacan’s teachings are intertwined with his proposals. Then, it cuts out constitutive notions of the psychoanalyst’s saying: discourse, enunciation subject, signifier, meaning, lalangue and writing. From them, axes emerge to reflect on the discourse based on the incomplete logic and to problematize the way in which the real, relegated in discursive studies, operates in it.
Published Version
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