− | Perhaps as a result of its 'unending dependence on an idol, a logic, or a language'<ref>[[Didier Anzieu]], in Sherry Tuckle, ''Psychoanalytic Politics: Freud's French Revolution'' (London 1978) p. 131</ref>, it has been suggested that 'the Lacanian movement...was doomed to dissidence, and its whole history has been punctuated by recurrent schisms'<ref>Elisabeth Roudinesco, ''jacques Lacan'' (Cambridge 1997) p. 432</ref>. The result has been however a fertile and disparate flowering of psychoanalytic thought within the French context. | + | Perhaps as a result of its 'unending dependence on an idol, a logic, or a language'<ref>Didier Anzieu, in Sherry Tuckle, ''Psychoanalytic Politics: Freud's French Revolution'' (London 1978) p. 131</ref>, it has been suggested that 'the Lacanian movement...was doomed to dissidence, and its whole history has been punctuated by recurrent schisms'<ref>Elisabeth Roudinesco, ''jacques Lacan'' (Cambridge 1997) p. 432</ref>. The result has been however a fertile and disparate flowering of psychoanalytic thought within the French context. |