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The Mother in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction - Psychoanalysis, Photography, Deconstruction (Hardcover)
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The Mother in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction - Psychoanalysis, Photography, Deconstruction (Hardcover)
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This book grows out of a longstanding fascination with the uncanny
status of the mother in literature, philosophy,
psychoanalysis, film, and photography. The mother haunts Freud's
writings on art and literature, emerges as an obscure stumbling
block in his metapsychological accounts of the psyche, and
ultimately undermines his patriarchal
accounts of the Oedipal complex as a foundation for human culture.
The figure of the mother becomes associated with some of
psychoanalysis's most unruly and enigmatic concepts (the uncanny,
anxiety, the primal scene, the crypt, and magical thinking). Read
in relation to deconstructive approaches to the work of mourning,
this book shows how the maternal function challenges traditional
psychoanalytic models of the subject, troubles existing systems of
representation, and provides a fertile source for nonmimetic,
nonlinear conceptions of time and space.
The readings in this book examine the uncanny properties of the
maternal function in psychoanalysis, technology, and literature in
order to show that the event of birth is radically unthinkable and
often becomes expressed through uncontrollable repetitions that
exceed the bounds of any subject. The maternal body often serves as
an unacknowledged reference point for modern media technologies
such as photography and the telephone, which attempt to mimic its
reproductive properties. To the extent that these technologies aim
to usurp the maternal function, they are often deployed as a means
of regulating or warding off anxieties that are provoked by the
experience of loss that real separation from the mother invariably
demands. As the incarnation of our first relation to the strange
exile of language, the mother is inherently a literary figure,
whose primal presence in literary texts opens us up to the
unspeakable relation to our own birth and, in so doing, helps us
give birth to new and fantasmatic images of futures that might
otherwise have remained unimaginable.
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