reine Buchbestellungen ab 5 Euro senden wir Ihnen Portofrei zu

Lacan and the Ghosts of Modernity
(Englisch)
Masculinity, Tradition, and the Anxiety of Influence
Marshall Needleman Armintor

19,95 €

inkl. MwSt. · Portofrei
Artikel zur Zeit nicht bestellbar

Produktbeschreibung

To understand the achievement of Jacques Lacan, one must turn to his roots. This book explores the grounding of Lacan's psychoanalytic work in the intellectual and artistic movements of the modernist period. More specifically, it examines masculine anxiety in the modernist novel in terms of Lacan's work on psychosis, masochism, and narcissism, viewed against the broader cultural context of the modernist era. In the process, this book illustrates how Lacan's intellectual apprenticeships and encounters (both real and imaginary) play out in his mature work, beginning with the first seminars of the 1950s. Like other thinkers of the early twentieth century, the trajectory of Lacan's psychoanalytic career is shaped by tendentious confrontations with peers, forebears, and intellectual traditions.
The Author: Marshall Needleman Armintor received his Ph.D. in English from Rice University in Houston, Texas. His principal research interests are European modernist literature and culture, literary theory, the history of Continental thought, and the postmodern novel. He currently teaches at the University of North Texas.

Über den Autor



The Author: Marshall Needleman Armintor received his Ph.D. in English from Rice University in Houston, Texas. His principal research interests are European modernist literature and culture, literary theory, the history of Continental thought, and the postmodern novel. He currently teaches at the University of North Texas.


Klappentext



To understand the achievement of Jacques Lacan, one must turn to his roots. This book explores the grounding of Lacan's psychoanalytic work in the intellectual and artistic movements of the modernist period. More specifically, it examines masculine anxiety in the modernist novel in terms of Lacan's work on psychosis, masochism, and narcissism, viewed against the broader cultural context of the modernist era. In the process, this book illustrates how Lacan's intellectual apprenticeships and encounters (both real and imaginary) play out in his mature work, beginning with the first seminars of the 1950s. Like other thinkers of the early twentieth century, the trajectory of Lacan's psychoanalytic career is shaped by tendentious confrontations with peers, forebears, and intellectual traditions.




Datenschutz-Einstellungen