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Let Them Rot - Antigone's Parallax (Paperback)
Loot Price: R506
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Let Them Rot - Antigone's Parallax (Paperback)
Series: Idiom: Inventing Writing Theory
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Was R613
Loot Price R506
Discovery Miles 5 060
You Save R107 (17%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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A provocative, highly accessible journey to the heart of Sophocles'
Antigone elucidating why it keeps resurfacing as a central text of
Western thought and Western culture. There is probably no classical
text that has inspired more interpretation, critical attention, and
creative response than Sophocles' Antigone. The general perspective
from which the book is written could be summarized with this simple
question: What is it about the figure of Antigone that keeps
haunting us? Why do all these readings and rewritings keep
emerging? To what kind of always contemporary contradiction does
the need, the urge to reread and reimagine Antigone-in all kinds of
contexts and languages-correspond? As key anchor points of this
general interrogation, three particular "obsessions" have driven
the author's thinking and writing about Antigone. First is the
issue of violence. The violence in Antigone is the opposite of
"graphic" as we have come to know it in movies and in the media;
rather, it is sharp and piercing, it goes straight to the bone. It
is the violence of language, the violence of principles, the
violence of desire, the violence of subjectivity. Then there is the
issue of funerary rites and their role in appeasing the specific
"undeadness" that seems to be the other side of human life, its
irreducible undercurrent that death alone cannot end and put to
rest. This issue prompted the author to look at the relationship
between language, sexuality, death, and "second death." The third
issue, which constitutes the focal point of the book, is Antigone's
statement that if it were her children or husband lying unburied
out there, she would let them rot and not take it upon herself to
defy the decree of the state. The author asks, how does this
exclusivist, singularizing claim (she would do it only for
Polyneices), which she uses to describe the "unwritten law" she
follows, tally with Antigone's universal appeal and compelling
power? Attempting to answer this leads to the question of what this
particular (Oedipal) family's misfortune, of which Antigone chooses
to be the guardian, shares with the general condition of humanity.
Which in turn forces us to confront the seemingly self-evident
question: "What is incest?" Let Them Rot is Alenka Zupancic's
absorbing and succinct guided tour of the philosophical and
psychoanalytic issues arising from the Theban trilogy. Her original
and surprising intervention into the broad and prominent field of
study related to Sophocles' Antigone illuminates the classical
text's ongoing relevance and invites a wide readership to become
captivated by its themes.
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