Desire in the Renaissance: Psychoanalysis and LiteratureValeria Finucci, Regina Schwartz Princeton University Press, 17 հոկ, 1994 թ. - 272 էջ Drawing on a variety of psychoanalytic approaches, ten critics engage in exciting discussions of the ways the "inner life" is depicted in the Renaissance and the ways it is shown to interact with the "external" social and economic spheres. Spurred by the rise of capitalism and the nuclear family, Renaissance anxieties over changes in identity emerged in the period's unconscious--or, as Freud would have it, in its literature. Hence, much of Renaissance literature represents themes that have been prominent in the discourse of psychoanalysis: mistaken identity, incest, voyeurism, mourning, and the uncanny. The essays in this volume range from Spenser and Milton to Machiavelli and Ariosto, and focus on the fluidity of gender, the economics of sexual and sibling rivalry, the power of the visual, and the cultural echoes of the uncanny. The discussion of each topic highlights language as the medium of desire, transgression, or oppression. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 72–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
... Reading (Himself Reading) Ovid 120 Lynn Enterline Through the Optic Glass: Voyeurism and Paradise Lost 146 Regina Schwartz LOVING AND LOATHING: THE ECONOMICS OF SUBJECTION Libidinal Economies: Machiavelli and Fortune's Rape 169 Juliana ...
... reading of (Petrarchan) subjectivity as in a continuous state of (Ovidian) change. The resulting existential moments of anguish, crisis, and alienation are used to shape a new history of the self. Challenging the assumption that the ...
... Reading of Freud's Das Unheimliche,” New Literary History 7.3 (1976): 525–48; Samuel Weber, “The Sideshow, or: Remarks on a Canny Moment,” Modern Language Notes 88.6 (1973): 1102– 33; and Marjorie Garber, Shakespeare's Ghost Writers ...
... ,” in Literature and Psychoanalysis: The Question of Reading, Otherwise, ed. Shoshana Felman (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982), 6. FAKING IT SEX, CLASS, AND GENDER MOBILITY THE INSINCERITY OF INTRODUCTION 15.
... reader that, although Alsemero is apparently consulting Mizaldus's De Arcanis Naturae, “there are no passages in it resembling those quoted by Beatrice.” Such tests are, however, very common in the scientific literature of the period ...
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
Desire in the Renaissance: Psychoanalysis and Literature Valeria Finucci,Regina M. Schwartz Դիտել հնարավոր չէ - 1994 |
Desire in the Renaissance: Psychoanalysis and Literature Valeria Finucci,Regina M. Schwartz Դիտել հնարավոր չէ - 1994 |