I particularly recommend the opening essay, Jeanne Lafont's "Topology and Efficiency". The unconscious is not separated from the conscious except by the time it takes to go there. Remarkable.
Everybody knows these moments where the spoken words do not present the things suffered. Topology explains these things, neither by affect, nor by hidden secret, nor by sentimental dimension, but by the set itself.
Read this with Cavell's Wittgenstein, to help show how Freud can help secure the latter from behaviorism. We might say that while everything may well be on the surface, ontologically speaking, the surface is not on the surface. Or in Lafont's terms, is "is not entirely present in the moment of enunciation." Or back to Wittgenstein: How odd that we spoke of a 'present moment of enunciation'!