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Images of Bliss - Ejaculation, Masculinity, Meaning (Paperback, Annotated Ed)
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Images of Bliss - Ejaculation, Masculinity, Meaning (Paperback, Annotated Ed)
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Aristotle believed semen to be the purest of all bodily secretions,
a vehicle for the spirit or psyche that gives form to substance.
For Proust's narrator in "Swann's Way," waking to find he has
experienced a nocturnal emission, it is the product of "some
misplacing of my thigh." The heavy metal band Metallica used it to
adorn an album cover. Beyond its biological function, semen has
been applied with surprising frequency to metaphorical and
narratological purposes.
In "Images of Bliss," Murat Aydemir undertakes an original and
extensive analysis of images of male orgasm and semen. In a series
of detailed case studies-Aristotle's "On the Generation of
Animals;" Andres Serrano's use of bodily fluids in his art;
paintings by Holbein and Leonardo; Proust's "In Search of Lost
Time; "hard-core pornography (both straight and gay); and key texts
from the poststructuralist canon, including Lacan on the phallus,
Bataille on expenditure, Barthes on bliss, and Derrida on
dissemination-Aydemir traces the complex and often contradictory
possibilities for imagination, description, and cognition that both
the idea and the reality of semen make available. In particular, he
foregrounds the significance of male ejaculation for masculine
subjectivity. More often than not, Aydemir argues, the event or
object of ejaculation emerges as the instance through which
identity, meaning, and gender are not so much affirmed as they are
relentlessly and productively questioned, complicated, and
displaced.
Combining close readings of diverse works with subtle theoretical
elaboration and a keen eye for the cultural ideals and anxieties
attached to sexuality, "Images of Bliss" offers a convincing and
longoverdue critical exploration of ejaculation in Western culture.
Murat Aydemir is assistant professor of comparative literature at
the University of Amsterdam.
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