Daniel Lagache began higher education at the
École Normale Supérieure (ENS) in 1924. Becoming interested in
psychopathology under the influence of
Georges Dumas, he began to study
medicine — alongside such figures as
Raymond Aron,
Paul Nizan, and
Jean-Paul Sartre — as well as
psychiatry. By 1937, he had become chief physician in the clinic directed by
Henri Claude. Appointed lecturer in
psychology at the
University of Strasbourg in 1937, he succeeded to the chair of psychology at the Sorbonne in 1947, before obtaining the chair of psychopathology in 1955. After a training analysis with
Rudolph Loewenstein in the 1930s, Lagache focused his research interests on Freudian psychoanalysis, bolstered by his knowledge of German; and in 1937 his article on "Mourning, melancholia and mania" enabled him to become a full member of the SPP' — the
Paris Psychoanalytic Society.
Psychoanalytic politics After the war, Lagache's views on training came into increasing conflict with those of the society's establishment, as he sought in a liberal synthesis of psychology and psychoanalysis leverage against the medical authoritarianism upheld by
Sacha Nacht. In 1953, Lagache led a break-away from the central body of French psychoanalysis, to form the new
Societe Francaise de Psychanalyse (French Society for Psychoanalysis, or SFP), accompanied by such leading figures as
Francoise Dolto and
Jacques Lacan. Despite earlier disputes, Lacan and Lagache thereafter worked together side by side in the new Society during the 1950s, Lagache predominantly as supervisor, Lacan as training analyst. Lacan's fulsome tribute in
Ecrits belongs to this era: "It is to the work of my colleague Daniel Lagache that we must turn for a true account of the work which...has been devoted to the transference...introducing into the function of the phenomenon structural distinctions that are essential for its critique...between the need for repetition and the repetition of need." In a more critical vein, Lacan also took up Lagache's work on the
ego ideal, as a springboard for his own article "Remarque sur le rapport de Daniel Lagache" on the distinction of the ideal ego and the ego ideal'. The major problem that had however faced the new Society from the start was that of obtaining recognition from the
International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA); and here Lacan increasingly appeared as the main obstacle to success. Although both men had been analysed by Loewenstein, Lacan unlike Lagache had reacted violently against his
ego psychology, and by 1961 he was publicly attacking Lagache for "personalism" due to the latter's mix of psychology and psychoanalysis. The result was that for the IPA - in
André Green's view – the problem became "how to accept Lagache, while leaving Lacan out". The conflict was only resolved in 1964 with the dissolution of the SFP, and the division of its assets and membership between two new organizations. Lagache became the first president of the new
Association Psychanalytique de France (APF), an institution that was swiftly recognized by the IPA in 1965. ==Writings==