While his writing is notoriously difficult (he once joked that his Écrits were not meant to be read, but to provide a "fateful grip"), his core ideas have fundamentally reshaped how we understand the human self. 1. The Mirror Stage: How the "I" is Born

You can think of the Real as the raw chaos of existence. When we encounter the Real—such as in a traumatic accident or a sudden, inexplicable horror—our symbolic framework collapses. The Real is the hard kernel that the signifier cannot swallow.

Lacan’s pivotal break came in 1953, when he left the mainstream Société Psychanalytique de Paris (SPP) to found his own school. He accused the psychoanalytic establishment of betraying Freud’s core discovery: the unconscious. While American "ego psychology" focused on adapting the patient to social norms, Lacan insisted that psychoanalysis must remain a subversive, linguistic, and tragic practice. He held infamous public séminaires in Paris for three decades, often speaking in riddles and changing his theories mid-stream, until his death in 1981.

Jacques Lacan (1901–1981) was a radical French psychoanalyst and psychiatrist whose "return to Freud" fundamentally reshaped continental philosophy, literary theory, and clinical practice. His work focuses on how human subjectivity is not an innate, stable ego but is instead built through language and social structures. Core Concepts (The Three Registers)

To navigate Lacan’s world, you need a map. He drew one using three intersecting registers: