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Sexual Difference, Abjection and Liminal Spaces

A Psychoanalytic Approach to the Abhorrence of the Feminine

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"Even given the promises of queer theory, it is wonderful that an author returns to generative fields of feminism, sexual difference, psychoanalysis, and feminine desire. The book's ideas are vibrant, unexpected, outside traditional feminist disputations, but without giving up sexuality, desire or a feminist project. Interrogating feminine desire is imperative, leaving Woman to prescriptive Jungian avatars is too dangerous in these times where culture commodifies identities and desire with such startling speed and normative results." Kareen Malone, Professor Emerita of Psychology, University of West Georgia, USA and program co-chair of the Atlanta Psychoanalytic Society

"Dr. Morris provides an innovative and much-needed intervention into the relation of psychoanalysis to contemporary thought on gender and sexuality. In this nuanced and carefully thought exploration of women as monstrous in this late-stage capitalist society, she extends, explicates, and entangles the psychoanalysis of Lacan with extensions of his work in interlocutors such as Kristeva and Ettinger. Morris opens new avenues for us to think about the way we see women as monstrous across different sociohistorical contexts. Developing the work of immanent theorists such as Deleuze and Guattari, as well as Braidotti, she engages the possibility that social anxiety in response to the female as inherently aberrant may indicate ‘an almost ungovernable excess between the assumed norm and the identified other’. In this rich reading of gender, sexuality, culture, and abjection, Morris delves into horror films, literature, feminist psychology, psychoanalysis, and cultural studies. This incisive and insightful book is well worth the journey." Kathleen Skott-Myhre, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of West Georgia, USA

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This book uses an interdisciplinary approach to explore the ways in which sexual difference can be understood as an encounter with otherness through the abjected, investigating social discourses and unconscious anxieties around ‘monstrous’ women throughout history and how they may challenge these characterisations. Les mer

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This book uses an interdisciplinary approach to explore the ways in which sexual difference can be understood as an encounter with otherness through the abjected, investigating social discourses and unconscious anxieties around ‘monstrous’ women throughout history and how they may challenge these characterisations.

Detaljer

Forlag
Routledge
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
Sider
142
ISBN
9780367173340
Utgivelsesår
2020
Format
23 x 16 cm

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«

"Even given the promises of queer theory, it is wonderful that an author returns to generative fields of feminism, sexual difference, psychoanalysis, and feminine desire. The book's ideas are vibrant, unexpected, outside traditional feminist disputations, but without giving up sexuality, desire or a feminist project. Interrogating feminine desire is imperative, leaving Woman to prescriptive Jungian avatars is too dangerous in these times where culture commodifies identities and desire with such startling speed and normative results." Kareen Malone, Professor Emerita of Psychology, University of West Georgia, USA and program co-chair of the Atlanta Psychoanalytic Society

"Dr. Morris provides an innovative and much-needed intervention into the relation of psychoanalysis to contemporary thought on gender and sexuality. In this nuanced and carefully thought exploration of women as monstrous in this late-stage capitalist society, she extends, explicates, and entangles the psychoanalysis of Lacan with extensions of his work in interlocutors such as Kristeva and Ettinger. Morris opens new avenues for us to think about the way we see women as monstrous across different sociohistorical contexts. Developing the work of immanent theorists such as Deleuze and Guattari, as well as Braidotti, she engages the possibility that social anxiety in response to the female as inherently aberrant may indicate ‘an almost ungovernable excess between the assumed norm and the identified other’. In this rich reading of gender, sexuality, culture, and abjection, Morris delves into horror films, literature, feminist psychology, psychoanalysis, and cultural studies. This incisive and insightful book is well worth the journey." Kathleen Skott-Myhre, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of West Georgia, USA

»

«

"Even given the promises of queer theory, it is wonderful that an author returns to generative fields of feminism, sexual difference, psychoanalysis, and feminine desire. The book's ideas are vibrant, unexpected, outside traditional feminist disputations, but without giving up sexuality, desire or a feminist project. Interrogating feminine desire is imperative, leaving Woman to prescriptive Jungian avatars is too dangerous in these times where culture commodifies identities and desire with such startling speed and normative results." Kareen Malone, Professor Emerita of Psychology, University of West Georgia, USA and program co-chair of the Atlanta Psychoanalytic Society

"Dr. Morris provides an innovative and much-needed intervention into the relation of psychoanalysis to contemporary thought on gender and sexuality. In this nuanced and carefully thought exploration of women as monstrous in this late-stage capitalist society, she extends, explicates, and entangles the psychoanalysis of Lacan with extensions of his work in interlocutors such as Kristeva and Ettinger. Morris opens new avenues for us to think about the way we see women as monstrous across different sociohistorical contexts. Developing the work of immanent theorists such as Deleuze and Guattari, as well as Braidotti, she engages the possibility that social anxiety in response to the female as inherently aberrant may indicate ‘an almost ungovernable excess between the assumed norm and the identified other’. In this rich reading of gender, sexuality, culture, and abjection, Morris delves into horror films, literature, feminist psychology, psychoanalysis, and cultural studies. This incisive and insightful book is well worth the journey." Kathleen Skott-Myhre, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of West Georgia, USA

»

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