The Cambridge introduction to literature and psychoanalysis

Bibliographic Information

The Cambridge introduction to literature and psychoanalysis

Jean-Michel Rabaté

(Cambridge introductions to literature)

Cambridge University Press, 2014

  • : pbk
  • : hardback

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Note

Bibliography: p. 237-248

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This volume is an introduction to the relationship between psychoanalysis and literature. Jean-Michel Rabate takes Sigmund Freud as his point of departure, studying in detail Freud's integration of literature in the training of psychoanalysts and how literature provided crucial terms for his myriad theories, such as the Oedipus complex. Rabate subsequently surveys other theoreticians such as Wilfred Bion, Marie Bonaparte, Carl Jung, Jacques Lacan, and Slavoj Zizek. This Introduction is organized thematically, examining in detail important terms like deferred action, fantasy, hysteria, paranoia, sublimation, the uncanny, trauma, and perversion. Using examples from Miguel de Cervantes and William Shakespeare to Sophie Calle and Yann Martel, Rabate demonstrates that the psychoanalytic approach to literature, despite its erstwhile controversy, has recently reemerged as a dynamic method of interpretation.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Freud's theater of the unconscious: Oedipus, Hamlet, and 'Hamlet'
  • 2. Literature and fantasy: towards a grammar of the subject
  • 3. From the uncanny to the unhomely
  • 4. Psychoanalysis and the paranoid critique of pure literature
  • 5. The literary phallus, from Poe to Gide
  • 6. A thing of beauty is a Freud for ever: Joyce with Jung and Freud, Lacan, and Borges
  • 7. From the history of perversion to the trauma of history.

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