Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Literary Criticism English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh

Lacan and Romanticism

edited by Daniela Garofalo & David Sigler

Publisher
State University of New York Press
Initial publish date
Apr 2019
Category
English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, General, Psychoanalysis
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781438473451
    Publish Date
    Apr 2019
    List Price
    $128.95
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781438473468
    Publish Date
    Jan 2020
    List Price
    $45.95

Add it to your shelf

Where to buy it

Description

Draws from the work of Jacques Lacan to provide innovative readings of Romantic literature in the long nineteenth century.

Lacan and Romanticism uses the work of psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan to deliver progressive readings of Romanticism by examining canonical Romantic authors such as William Wordsworth, Mary Shelley, John Keats, and Jane Austen, as well as lesser-known writers such as the graveyard poets and Sarah Scott. The contributors develop innovative approaches to Lacanian literary studies, focusing on neglected or emergent areas of Lacan's thought and approaching Lacan's best-known work in unexpected ways. The essay topics include the visible and seeable, war, the death drive, nonhuman sexualities, sublimation, loss and mourning, utopia, capitalism, fantasy, and topology, and they range from the mid-eighteenth through the early decades of the nineteenth centuries. The book reveals new ways of thinking about art and literature with psychoanalytic theory and suggests how theoretical approaches can contribute meaningfully to literary studies in general.

About the authors

Daniela Garofalo's profile page

David Sigler is assistant professor of English at the University of Calgary.

David Sigler's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"Reading this book may well entice the Romanticist who isn't already engaged in psychoanalytic theory to do so, and the Lacanian scholar?who may have concluded erroneously that Lacan's last word on Romanticism was his criticism of some well-known lines from the Immortality ode?to reconsider the value of returning to Romantic literature and visual culture." — Guinn Batten, author of The Orphaned Imagination: Melancholy and Commodity Culture in English Romanticism

Other titles by