
Incorporating Cultural Theory
Maternity at the Millennium
- Publisher
- State University of New York Press
- Initial publish date
- Jan 2002
- Category
- Gay Studies, Social Psychology, Psychoanalysis
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780791452530
- Publish Date
- Jan 2002
- List Price
- $128.95
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780791452547
- Publish Date
- Jan 2002
- List Price
- $45.95
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Description
Uses psychoanalysis to reconsider cultural studies with a focus on wholeness and integration.
Incorporating Cultural Theory addresses the status of the body and sexuality in cultural criticism by focusing on issues of sexuality, intimacy, and identity. With a perspective grounded in body politics, O'Neill offers careful but contesting studies of theorists including Barthes, Derrida, Lyotard, Freud, Lacan, Hegel, Parsons, and Merleau-Ponty, that amplify his own overarching theoretical framework. Concluding chapters demonstrate the practicality of the author's body-political critical theory, offering analyses of Jurassic Park and the London Millennium Dome as cyborg practices designed to bypass the reproductive anxieties of bodies, families, and communities by shape-shifting the loss of a civic boundary. The overarching frame of the book-maternity at the millennium-provides a unique topic for using psychoanalysis to reconsider cultural studies, and O'Neill argues throughout for keeping cultural studies focused on wholeness and integration, instead of the fragmentation and alienation embraced by postmodern theoretical excesses.
About the author
John O'Neill is the author of the novel Fatal Light Awareness and four poetry collections, Animal Walk, Love in Alaska, The Photographer of Wolves, and Criminal Mountains. He was raised in Scarborough, Ontario, where his parents worked for many years as building superintendents, an aspect of his history explored in The Photographer of Wolves. He was a winner in the Prairie Fire Long Poem Contest and Sheldon Currie Fiction Prize, and the recipient of a 'Maggie' - a Manitoba Magazine Award - for Best Story for his "The Book About The Bear." John was a finalist, with his manuscript Goth Girls of Banff (Newest Press 2020), for the HarperCollins/UBC Prize for Best New Fiction. He taught high-school English and Dramatic Arts for 29 years, and now lives and writes in the Leslieville neighbourhood of Toronto. He and his artist wife Ann make frequent trips to Canada's Rocky Mountains, and this landscape continues to be a major influence on his writing.
Editorial Reviews
"O'Neill is a master stylist. No reader will doubt the breadth of knowledge and reading that mark his intellectual mastery of philosophy and sociology, as well as of postmodern theories. This book is not only a trenchant analysis of twentieth-century Anglo American society, but also a demonstration of cultural theory in a new mode." — Ellie Ragland, University of Missouri
"The status of the body and sexuality in critical theory is of immense importance at a time when postmodern theory tends to embrace a fractured, decentered view of the subject, thus abandoning the ground of social change in people's everyday lives." — Ben Agger, University of Texas at Arlington
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