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OverviewAttempts to understand recent changes in the canon of American literature through the aid of psychoanalytic theory. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Todd McGowanPublisher: State University of New York Press Imprint: State University of New York Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.798kg ISBN: 9780791448731ISBN 10: 0791448738 Pages: 162 Publication Date: 09 November 2000 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , General , Undergraduate Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of Contents"Acknowledgments Introduction: The Canon Wars and Psychoanalysis 1 The Canonical Unconscious 2 Dispossessing the Self: ""The Yellow Wall-paper"" and the Renunciation of Property 3 The Awakening of Desire, or, Why Edna Pontellier Isn't a Man 4 Acting without the Father: Charles Chesnutt's New Aristocrat 5 Liberation and Domination: Their Eyes Were Watching God and the Evolution of Capitalism 6 Agency and the Traumatic Encounter: Politics after Poststructuralism Notes Index"Reviews"""Americanists who have felt dissatisfied with the limits of the canonicity debate will be happy to find this work. Those interested in the individual artists will also find the readings quite interesting in themselves, but the tie-in to recent psychoanalytic theory will also excite interest. The book will be helpful in African American and women's studies programs that have been warned off of psychoanalytic approaches on the basis of a bad experience with psychoanalytic applications that failed-this 'new' Lacanian one does not fail-to make space for the other subjects (feminine, racial, etc.)."" - Juliet Flower MacCannell, author of The Hysteric's Guide to the Future Female Subject ""Very interesting, intriguing, provocative-an outstanding contribution to the fields of the canon debate as well as literary and cultural studies. By opening up the gap of the canonical unconscious, the author attempts to access the multiple voices which have been silenced and repressed by the so-called canonized tradition. Appropriating Lacan and Zdizuek in terms of the ethics of psychoanalysis, the author looks at the canon wars from a fresh intellectual perspective."" - Youngmin Kim, Dongguk University, Korea" Americanists who have felt dissatisfied with the limits of the canonicity debate will be happy to find this work. Those interested in the individual artists will also find the readings quite interesting in themselves, but the tie-in to recent psychoanalytic theory will also excite interest. The book will be helpful in African American and women's studies programs that have been warned off of psychoanalytic approaches on the basis of a bad experience with psychoanalytic applications that failed-this 'new' Lacanian one does not fail-to make space for the other subjects (feminine, racial, etc.). - Juliet Flower MacCannell, author of The Hysteric's Guide to the Future Female Subject Very interesting, intriguing, provocative-an outstanding contribution to the fields of the canon debate as well as literary and cultural studies. By opening up the gap of the canonical unconscious, the author attempts to access the multiple voices which have been silenced and repressed by the so-called canonized tradition. Appropriating Lacan and Zdizuek in terms of the ethics of psychoanalysis, the author looks at the canon wars from a fresh intellectual perspective. - Youngmin Kim, Dongguk University, Korea Author InformationTodd McGowan is Assistant Professor of English at Southwest Texas State University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |