Lacan's shift from a lingual psychoanalysis to a topological psychoanalysis concluded with the status of the
sinthome as unanalyzable. The seminar on the
sinthome extends the theory of the Borromean knot, which in the
RSI (Real, Symbolic, Imaginary) seminar had been proposed as the structure of the subject by adding the
sinthome as the fourth ring to the triad already mentioned, tying together a knot which constantly threatens to come undone. The topic of the seminar was the life and work of
James Joyce: "the sign of [Lacan's] entanglement is indeed Joyce, precisely inasmuch as what he puts forth, and in a way that is quite especially that of an artist because he has the know-how to pull it off, is the
sinthome, and a
sinthome such that there is nothing to be done to analyse it." Clinical psychologist Jonathan D. Redmond has suggested using the idea "to denote specific signifiers in the real that, for reasons specific to the individual, may take on a supplementary function in psychic structure. In this sense, the
sinthome is 'a piece of the real' linking
jouissance to a signifier that is able to take on the supplementary function of the Name-of-the-Father." Since meaning (or
sens in Lacan's seminars) is already figured within the knot, at the intersection of the Symbolic and the Imaginary, it follows that the function of the
sinthome, knotting together
the Real,
the Imaginary and
the Symbolic, is beyond meaning—especially in the framework of analysis—and is essentially a personal, idiosyncratic route to control over
jouissance,
catharsis and unprecedented creativity. Roberto Harari writes in his study of the seminar,
How James Joyce Made His Name, that it is "a question of the occurrence, without it being sought, of a certain experience that leads to the unique point of inventing one's own
sinthome. […] The suffering entailed by the symptom is certainly not at work in the same way in the
sinthome, linked as it is to the
epiphanic quality of inventing something".
Žižek's interpretation Extending from his use of the
Lacanian framework, Slovenian philosopher
Slavoj Žižek variously expounds on the idea of the
sinthome, in particular in
The Sublime Object of Ideology. He asserts, working off of Lacan's general idea that enjoyment of the symptom as
sinthome radicalizes the subject, that "symptom, conceived as
sinthome, is […] the only point that gives consistency to the subject. In other words, symptom is the way we—the subjects—'avoid madness', […] through the binding of our enjoyment to a certain signifying, symbolic formation which assures a minimum of consistency to our
being-in-the-world"; ultimately, in practice, "the final Lacanian definition of the end of the psychoanalytic process is identification with the symptom", and, in its aftermath, a collaboration between the subject and its symptom to make a
sinthome, for instance with art, particularly with Lacan's initial example of James Joyce. ==See also==