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Catherine Millot (born 1944) is a French Lacanian psychoanalyst and author, professor of psychoanalysis at the University of Paris-VIII. Millot studied philosophy before turning to psychoanalysis. In 1971 she started an eight-year analysis with Lacan, and attended his seminars from 1971 until his death. Her thesis, turned into the book ''Freud anti-pédagogue'', argued that pedagogy could not be based on psychoanalysis, since the role of analyst involved a radical openness to lack which was incompatible with the role of teacher.〔(Catherine Millot ( *1944) )〕 In 1975 she started teaching in the department of psychoanalysis at Paris VIII.〔 She has written on transsexuality, arguing controversially that a woman's transsexuality is hysteric while a man's transsexuality is based on psychotic identification with the inaccessible completeness of woman as an ideal woman.〔 ==Works== * ''Freud anti-pédagogue'', 1979 * ''Horsexe. Essai sur le transsexualisme'', 1983. Translated as ''Horsexe. Essay on Transexuality'', 1990 * ''Nobodaddy. L'hystérie dans le siècle'', Distribution Distique, 1988 * ''La vocation de l'écrivain'', Gallimard, 1991 * ''Gide, Genet, Mishima. L'intelligence de la perversion'', Gallimard, 1997 * ''Abîmes ordinaires'', 2001 * ''La vie parfaite. Jeanne Guyon, Simone Weil, Etty Hillesum'', 2006 * ''Ô solitude'', 2011 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Catherine Millot」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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