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. In 1975 she started teaching in the department of psychoanalysis at Paris VIII.
In 1983 in her book Horsexe, she asserted her belief that transgender women's gender identity is "psychotic" and relies inappropriately on ideals and stereotypes of femininity.
Works
- Freud anti-pédagogue, 1979
- Horsexe. Essai sur le transsexualisme, 1983. Translated as Horsexe. Essay on Transsexuality, 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
References
- ^ Elaine Hoffman Baruch (1991). Women Analyze Women: In France, England, and the United States. NYU Press. pp. 87–98. ISBN 978-0-8147-1170-5.
- ^ Catherine Millot (*1944)