In 1977, Shoshana Felman opened up the question of how literature and psychoanalysis speak to each other's most intimate concerns with her landmark volume of Yale French Studies entitled Literature and Psychoanalysis: The Question of Reading ("Otherwise"). That relationship, she proposed, needed to be reinvented and transformed into a real dialogue between two different bodies of language and two different modes of knowledge. Over the forty years that have elapsed since the publication of Felman's 1977 volume, the encounter between literature and psychoanalysis has participated in the emergence of several new fields of critical inquiry, such as trauma, testimony, affect theory, neuro-psychoanalysis, and performance studies, and has been a privileged space for reflections on mourning, singularity, translation, transference, and translatability, the death drive, repetition, violence, cruelty, virtual reality, the clinic, and sexuality. In a world that has become enamored with modes of knowledge production that respond to ever increasing demands for quantifiable verification (the science of the brain) or for programmatic applicability, literature and psychoanalysis continue to offer an intractable resistance. Inspired (both directly and indirectly) by Felman's 1977 volume and working from the premise that this intractability is itself a source of potential transformation, the essays in this issue of Paragraph look to literature and psychoanalysis to invent new forms for the future.
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Elissa Marder (Ph.D., Yale University, 1989); joint appointment in the Departments of French and Comparative Literature; international fellow at the London Graduate School: 19th and 20th century French, British, and American literature, literary theory, psychoanalysis, feminist theory, film, and photography. Professor Marder was a founding member of the Emory Psychoanalytic Studies Program and currently is on the PSP Exectutive Committtee.
Psychoanalysis and Literature creatively re-imagined in light of the 40th anniversary of Shoshana Felman’s groundbreaking volume of Yale French StudiesIn 1977 Shoshana Felman opened up the question of how literature and psychoanalysis speak to each other’s most intimate concerns with her landmark volume of Yale French Studies, ‘Literature and Psychoanalysis. The Question of Reading: Otherwise.’ That relationship, she proposed, called for a dialogue between two different bodies of language and two different modes of knowledge.In the forty years that have elapsed since Felman first articulated this relationship, alongside leading theorists and psychoanalysts of the time, the encounter between literature and psychoanalysis has participated in the emergence of a whole new range of fields of critical inquiry, such as trauma studies, testimony, affect theory, neuropsychoanalysis and performance studies, and has been a privileged space for reflection on some of its core concerns, such as mourning, singularity, translation and translatability, the death drive, virtual reality and clinical practice.In a world that has become enamoured with increasing demands for quantifiable verification, literature and psychoanalysis continue to offer an intractable resistance. Inspired directly and indirectly by Felman’s 1977 volume, and working from the premise that this intractability is itself a source of potential transformation, the articles in this issue of Paragraph by leading figures in the field look to literature and psychoanalysis to invent new forms of knowledge, or of unknowability.Key Features•A contemporary re-assessment of psychoanalysis and literature inspired by Shoshana Felman’s landmark1977 Yale French Studies volume.•Includes a new essay by Shoshana Felman on Psychoanalysis and Literature.•Articles by leading theorists in the field of psychoanalysis and literary theory on topics such as trauma, affect theory, mourning, complaining, singularity, translation and translatability, and the death drive.About the editorElissa Marder is Professor of French and Comparative Literature at Emory University, Atlanta, where she is also affiliated with the Departments of Philosophy and Women’s Studies. She is a founding member of the Emory Psychoanalytic Studies Program and served as its Director from 2001 to 2006. She is the author of Dead Time: Temporal Disorders in the Wake of Modernity (Baudelaire and Flaubert) (Stanford University Press, 2001), The Mother in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction: Psychoanalysis, Photography, Deconstruction (Fordham University Press, 2012) and co-editor (with E. S. Burt and Kevin Newmark) of Time for Baudelaire (Poetry, Theory, History), special volume of Yale French Studies 125/126 (Spring, 2014).
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Taschenbuch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - Psychoanalysis and Literature creatively re-imagined in light of the 40th anniversary of Shoshana Felman's groundbreaking volume of Yale French Studies In 1977 Shoshana Felman opened up the question of how literature and psychoanalysis speak to each other's most intimate concerns with her landmark volume of Yale French Studies, 'Literature and Psychoanalysis. The Question of Reading: Otherwise.' That relationship, she proposed, called for a dialogue between two different bodies of language and two different modes of knowledge. In the forty years that have elapsed since Felman first articulated this relationship, alongside leading theorists and psychoanalysts of the time, the encounter between literature and psychoanalysis has participated in the emergence of a whole new range of fields of critical inquiry, such as trauma studies, testimony, affect theory, neuropsychoanalysis and performance studies, and has been a privileged space for reflection on some of its core concerns, such as mourning, singularity, translation and translatability, the death drive, virtual reality and clinical practice. In a world that has become enamoured with increasing demands for quantifiable verification, literature and psychoanalysis continue to offer an intractable resistance. Inspired directly and indirectly by Felman's 1977 volume, and working from the premise that this intractability is itself a source of potential transformation, the articles in this issue of Paragraph by leading figures in the field look to literature and psychoanalysis to invent new forms of knowledge, or of unknowability. Key Features -A contemporary re-assessment of psychoanalysis and literature inspired by Shoshana Felman's landmark1977 Yale French Studies volume. -Includes a new essay by Shoshana Felman on Psychoanalysis and Literature. -Articles by leading theorists in the field of psychoanalysis and literary theory on topics such as trauma, affect theory, mourning, complaining, singularity, translation and translatability, and the death drive. About the editor Elissa Marder is Professor of French and Comparative Literature at Emory University, Atlanta, where she is also affiliated with the Departments of Philosophy and Women's Studies. She is a founding member of the Emory Psychoanalytic Studies Program and served as its Director from 2001 to 2006. She is the author of Dead Time: Temporal Disorders in the Wake of Modernity (Baudelaire and Flaubert) (Stanford University Press, 2001), The Mother in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction: Psychoanalysis, Photography, Deconstruction (Fordham University Press, 2012) and co-editor (with E. S. Burt and Kevin Newmark) of Time for Baudelaire (Poetry, Theory, History), special volume of Yale French Studies 125/126 (Spring, 2014). Artikel-Nr. 9781474424837
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