
Once again, Jorge Alemán challenges capitalist discourse with a rewriting, in the form of a breviary, of his previous books. His Breviary explores various readings, interpretations, and crucial contemporary issues, delving into the extent to which politics and psychoanalysis—without ever overlapping—enter into a mutual interplay of correspondences. At the same time, he manages to tie together the loose threads of his theoretical formulations with the legacy of Marx, Freud, Heidegger, and Lacan. The renowned psychoanalyst and writer thus offers us a repertoire of key concepts, amalgamating several sequences (love and event; machismo; inclusive language; Evil) that range from his readings of the neoliberal form of Capital to the way these impact life and social and subjective circumstances. This work can be read in thematic blocks, following the suggested order, or randomly, as each ent...read more





