This article on the Dutch poet J.C. Bloem (1887-1966) attempts to understand an aspect of Bloem's biography from the perspective of his poetry and vice versa. Adopting this perspective, it turns out that a biographical feature such as 'laziness' relates to the poetical concept of 'desire'. I define this concept as a desire for stasis and stillness, for a balance of life and death. Subsequently, I discuss Bloem's concept of 'desire' within the context of Jacques Lacan's psychoanalysis. Certain poems and aphorisms already analyzed in the first part of this article are reinterpreted within a Lacanian framework. The Lacanian frame of reference foregrounds a fundamental ambivalence within Bloem's concept of desire: it is a desire for laziness an...
The conceptof desire is central to Lacan’s theory and practice, even if it is not among the four fun...
© 1990 Dr. Brenda Janice MarshallInsofar as this dissertation aims to explore aspects of a Lacanian ...
The article explores the thesis of Lacan, that the only thing one can be blamed, at least from an an...
This article on the Dutch poet J.C. Bloem (1887-1966) attempts to understand an aspect of Bloem's bi...
How does the text desire? To answer this question we have to know what desire means in Lacanian psy...
The psychoanalytic criticism of Lawrence has been a familiar one, relying on Freudian interpretation...
Jacques Lacan is regarded as an influential French psychoanalyst in the 20th century. In the present...
In this article, the author discusses the thesis that Freudo-Lacanian psychoanalysis proposes a radi...
The Death Drive, regarding the Real Where do we find the link between the Freudian death drive and t...
In this dissertation, I propose that a Lacanian psychoanalytic approach to the speaking subject of t...
In this dissertation I analyze Maurice Sceve's Delie using a Lacanian approach. Like the unconscious...
Abstract: This paper is an attempt to discuss the psychoanalyst/ philosopher Jacques Lacan’s notion ...
This article reviews the concepts of Alienation and Separation as two distinct “logical moments” con...
In contemporary academic literary studies, Lacan is often considered impenetrably obscure, due to th...
The article presents B. Leśmian as a poet involved in his self-imposed task of promoting a return to...
The conceptof desire is central to Lacan’s theory and practice, even if it is not among the four fun...
© 1990 Dr. Brenda Janice MarshallInsofar as this dissertation aims to explore aspects of a Lacanian ...
The article explores the thesis of Lacan, that the only thing one can be blamed, at least from an an...
This article on the Dutch poet J.C. Bloem (1887-1966) attempts to understand an aspect of Bloem's bi...
How does the text desire? To answer this question we have to know what desire means in Lacanian psy...
The psychoanalytic criticism of Lawrence has been a familiar one, relying on Freudian interpretation...
Jacques Lacan is regarded as an influential French psychoanalyst in the 20th century. In the present...
In this article, the author discusses the thesis that Freudo-Lacanian psychoanalysis proposes a radi...
The Death Drive, regarding the Real Where do we find the link between the Freudian death drive and t...
In this dissertation, I propose that a Lacanian psychoanalytic approach to the speaking subject of t...
In this dissertation I analyze Maurice Sceve's Delie using a Lacanian approach. Like the unconscious...
Abstract: This paper is an attempt to discuss the psychoanalyst/ philosopher Jacques Lacan’s notion ...
This article reviews the concepts of Alienation and Separation as two distinct “logical moments” con...
In contemporary academic literary studies, Lacan is often considered impenetrably obscure, due to th...
The article presents B. Leśmian as a poet involved in his self-imposed task of promoting a return to...
The conceptof desire is central to Lacan’s theory and practice, even if it is not among the four fun...
© 1990 Dr. Brenda Janice MarshallInsofar as this dissertation aims to explore aspects of a Lacanian ...
The article explores the thesis of Lacan, that the only thing one can be blamed, at least from an an...