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Obscenity, Psychoanalysis and Literature offers a fascinating
psychoanalytic reading of four landmark obscenity trials involving
the texts of D. H. Lawrence and James Joyce. By tracing the legal
histories of Lawrence and Joyce, from censorship to their eventual
redemption and transformation into champions of sexual freedom, the
book draws a narrative of changing legal, literary and cultural
investments. The book examines the four trials of these authors in
detail to show how the literary text can function as a symbol of
both life and death and the political uses of figuring them as
such. Taking a psychoanalytic perspective, we can see how this
narrative of sexual repression to sexual liberation may itself be
an emergent form of the superego imperative to enjoy and consume.
Through close readings of trial transcripts and archival documents,
this book helps elucidate the fantasies operating throughout the
trials: the unquestioned assumptions of the nature of sexuality,
gender, drugs and truth. It demonstrates with clarity how, through
its attempt to suppress the sexual, the law confronts its own
nature as language and in doing so troubles the distinctions
between law, literature and desire that it usually wishes to
protect. Offering a uniquely psychoanalytic account of the
obscenity trials of these authors, this text will be of great
interest to scholars from across the fields of psychoanalysis, law
and literature.
Obscenity, Psychoanalysis and Literature offers a fascinating
psychoanalytic reading of four landmark obscenity trials involving
the texts of D. H. Lawrence and James Joyce. By tracing the legal
histories of Lawrence and Joyce, from censorship to their eventual
redemption and transformation into champions of sexual freedom, the
book draws a narrative of changing legal, literary and cultural
investments. The book examines the four trials of these authors in
detail to show how the literary text can function as a symbol of
both life and death and the political uses of figuring them as
such. Taking a psychoanalytic perspective, we can see how this
narrative of sexual repression to sexual liberation may itself be
an emergent form of the superego imperative to enjoy and consume.
Through close readings of trial transcripts and archival documents,
this book helps elucidate the fantasies operating throughout the
trials: the unquestioned assumptions of the nature of sexuality,
gender, drugs and truth. It demonstrates with clarity how, through
its attempt to suppress the sexual, the law confronts its own
nature as language and in doing so troubles the distinctions
between law, literature and desire that it usually wishes to
protect. Offering a uniquely psychoanalytic account of the
obscenity trials of these authors, this text will be of great
interest to scholars from across the fields of psychoanalysis, law
and literature.
To Which Are Added Some Hints On Private Observatories.
To Which Are Added Some Hints On Private Observatories.
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