|
Showing 1 - 11 of
11 matches in All Departments
"An Evening With JonBenet Ramsey" begins with a full-length play,
"Cowboy's Sweetheart," which imagines the life of a sexually abused
and murdered child as it might have evolved had she lived. The play
is followed by two essays which consider the JonBenet Ramsey case
from a number of perspectives. The result is an incisive critique
of the media and a compelling study of the psychological
consequences of what is a national epidemic: the sexual abuse of
children.
Email: [email protected]
This book explores the complex relationship between art and
politics. Walter Davis uses his extensive knowledge of
psychoanalysis to develop a philosophical critique of the impact
that the current political climate is having on all artistic
endeavour. He uses examples from a wide variety of fields including
the theatre and popular culture, to show how true artistic freedom
of expression is under threat from the ideological constraints
imposed by contemporary capitalism. Starting with an analysis of
the censorship of the play 'My Name is Rachel Corrie', which was
withdrawn from production by a major New York theatre due to
political pressure, Davis shows how all art that challenges the
mainstream is suppressed or distorted to suit the politics of our
time - one that will not recognise the truth of human experience
and the disorder at the heart of all civilization.
"Davis writes with fervor, vision, and keen moral appreciation of
our condition. He encourages us to see what we fear to see, to say
what we fear to say. This book is illuminating, challenging,
fierce." Michael Eigen, author of The Sensitive Self, Rage,
Ecstasy, Toxic Nourishment, Damaged Bonds andThe Psychoanalytic
Mystic
Why is fear a dominant emotion in contemporary society? Why are
politicians using words like 'terror', 'evil' and 'fundamentalism',
and what effect is it having on public consciousness?
Answering these questions, Walter A. Davis taps into the cultural
psyche to explore the link between ideology and emotional and
psychological manipulation. Starting with the three topics that
have preoccupied social discourse since 9-11 -- terror, evil and
fundamentalism -- he shows that the Bush administration has been
hugely successful in controlling and developing a new political
climate through the creation of an almost hypnotic mass
consciousness.
Davis's findings take us to the heart of the ideological paralysis
of the Left, while offering an innovative approach to understanding
contemporary history.
Davis fuses a psychoanalytic and philosophical framework to explain
the relation between culture and political events, from the
sado-masochist hysteria of Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ'
to the atrocities at Abu Ghraib prison; and from the genocidal use
of depleted uranium in Iraq to the apocalyptic language driving the
Christian Right's assault on basic human rights.
He exposes the motives and belief-systems of this new American
psyche and shows how it sustains the Bush administration's agenda.
Illuminating how psychological needs govern political action, Davis
reveals why the relationship between politics and public
consciousness has massive implications for all of us beyond
America's borders.
Walter A. Davis is Professor Emeritus in the Department of English
at Ohio State University. He is the author of six previous books,
including Inwardness and Existence: Subjectivity in/and Hegel,
Heidegger, Marx and Freud (University of Wisconsin Press, 1989) and
Deracination: Historicity, Hiroshima, and the Tragic Imperative
(SUNY Press, 2001).
"An Evening With JonBenet Ramsey" begins with a full-length play,
"Cowboy's Sweetheart," which imagines the life of a sexually abused
and murdered child as it might have evolved had she lived. The play
is followed by two essays which consider the JonBenet Ramsey case
from a number of perspectives. The result is an incisive critique
of the media and a compelling study of the psychological
consequences of what is a national epidemic: the sexual abuse of
children.
Email: [email protected]
|
You may like...
Nope
Jordan Peele
Blu-ray disc
R132
Discovery Miles 1 320
Goldfinger
Honor Blackman, Lois Maxwell, …
Blu-ray disc
R51
Discovery Miles 510
|