First steps in Žižek
Žižek is the most popular living Lacanian, and also the one whose books most reliably confuse first-time readers because each book reads like every other Žižek book — punctuated by digressions, jokes, and Hegel. The trick is reading them in an order that builds.
He also has more ideas than any single book conveys; the goal of this path is to get the operating system (Lacan + Hegel + ideology critique) running so you can read any later Žižek without losing the thread.
[1] Setup (~2 hr)
If you haven't done Lacan in 10 hours, read at least its steps [1] and [2] first. Žižek assumes you know Mirror Stage, the Symbolic / Real / Imaginary, and Objet petit a.
[2] The Sublime Object of Ideology (~5 hr)
The Sublime Object of Ideology
Žižek's first English book. Read straight through. Pay attention to:
- The Marx → Lacan move (commodity fetishism as Fetishistic Disavowal)
- "They know very well, but still they are doing it" — Ideology as practice, not belief
- The Sublime object as the void around which symbolic systems organize
- The Master Signifier (S1) and how it stitches a discourse closed
This is your operating-system install.
[3] Pick your obsession (~5 hr)
Žižek has done dozens of books, each focused on one register. Pick the one that hooks you:
- (a) Cinema: The Real Gaze: Film Theory After Lacan (McGowan applies Žižek's framework systematically to film). Or watch The Pervert's Guide to Cinema and The Pervert's Guide to Ideology — Žižek's documentaries.
- (b) Religion / theology: The Fidelity of Betrayal: Towards a Church Beyond Belief (Rollins, applying Žižek to Christian theology). Žižek's own The Puppet and the Dwarf if you want it from the source.
- (c) Politics / economics: Reading Marx (Žižek on Marx) and Abolishing Freedom: A Plea for a Contemporary Use of Fatalism (Ruda on freedom).
- (d) Hegel proper: skip ahead to [4].
[4] Žižek on Hegel (~3 hr)
Less Than Nothing: Hegel and the Shadow of Dialectical Materialism — pick chapters that interest you, do not try to read straight through. Less Than Nothing is 1000+ pages; treat it as a reference book.
If you want a shorter Hegel-via-Žižek, Hegel in a Wired Brain is a single argument in a single book.
[5] After Žižek
If you got through [3] and [4], you are ready for:
- The Singularity of Being: Lacan and the Immortal Within (Mari Ruti — counterweight to Žižek; argues Lacan supports a positive singularity ethics, not just lack)
- The Chattering Mind: A Conceptual History of Everyday Talk (a non-Žižekian Lacanian register; everyday speech as theoretical object)
- Read My Desire by Joan Copjec (Read My Desire: Lacan Against the Historicists in our corpus). Copjec is Žižek's contemporary; her reading of Lacan diverges interestingly from his on Sexuation and Real.
Also worth doing: Lacan and Marx for the political-economic register; Toward Seminar XX if you want to see what Žižek is reading when he reads Lacan.
What Žižek doesn't help with
- Clinical Lacan: Žižek does not work clinically; for that read Fink. See Clinical Lacan.
- The seminars proper: Žižek mostly cites the late Lacan (Seminars XI, XVII, XX). For early Lacan (Seminars I–VII, the Écrits essays), read Fink and the Hook/Neill/Vanheule commentary.
- Lacan's mathemes / topology: Žižek references them but doesn't teach them. See Schemas.