Final Acts: Traversing the Fantasy in the Modern Memoir

Analyzes contemporary memoirs of terminal illness from a psychoanalytic perspective.

Writers facing death offer a rare glimpse into human mortality-they have the unusual opportunity to craft the closing chapter of their life stories. Final Acts explores memoirs of terminal illness, and shows a paradoxical pattern where the diagnosis of terminal illness evokes not despair, but a new freedom and richness in life. The memoirs analyzed-by Allon White, Harold Brodkey, Gillian Rose, and Derek Jarman-provide insight into the experience of radical contingency that an awareness of mortality brings. Tom Ratekin engages the concept of "traversing the fantasy," elaborated by Jacques Lacan and Slavoj Žižek, to argue that the new richness in life each of these memoirists' experiences arises from the abandonment of a particular fantasy that guided his or her earlier work-a fantasy that both protected and inhibited the memoirist. Freed from convention, these writers, while close to death, can reinterpret the stories presented in their earlier work, and gain new perspectives on their worlds and existence.

1100351692
Final Acts: Traversing the Fantasy in the Modern Memoir

Analyzes contemporary memoirs of terminal illness from a psychoanalytic perspective.

Writers facing death offer a rare glimpse into human mortality-they have the unusual opportunity to craft the closing chapter of their life stories. Final Acts explores memoirs of terminal illness, and shows a paradoxical pattern where the diagnosis of terminal illness evokes not despair, but a new freedom and richness in life. The memoirs analyzed-by Allon White, Harold Brodkey, Gillian Rose, and Derek Jarman-provide insight into the experience of radical contingency that an awareness of mortality brings. Tom Ratekin engages the concept of "traversing the fantasy," elaborated by Jacques Lacan and Slavoj Žižek, to argue that the new richness in life each of these memoirists' experiences arises from the abandonment of a particular fantasy that guided his or her earlier work-a fantasy that both protected and inhibited the memoirist. Freed from convention, these writers, while close to death, can reinterpret the stories presented in their earlier work, and gain new perspectives on their worlds and existence.

33.95 In Stock
Final Acts: Traversing the Fantasy in the Modern Memoir

Final Acts: Traversing the Fantasy in the Modern Memoir

by Tom Ratekin
Final Acts: Traversing the Fantasy in the Modern Memoir

Final Acts: Traversing the Fantasy in the Modern Memoir

by Tom Ratekin

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$33.95 

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Overview

Analyzes contemporary memoirs of terminal illness from a psychoanalytic perspective.

Writers facing death offer a rare glimpse into human mortality-they have the unusual opportunity to craft the closing chapter of their life stories. Final Acts explores memoirs of terminal illness, and shows a paradoxical pattern where the diagnosis of terminal illness evokes not despair, but a new freedom and richness in life. The memoirs analyzed-by Allon White, Harold Brodkey, Gillian Rose, and Derek Jarman-provide insight into the experience of radical contingency that an awareness of mortality brings. Tom Ratekin engages the concept of "traversing the fantasy," elaborated by Jacques Lacan and Slavoj Žižek, to argue that the new richness in life each of these memoirists' experiences arises from the abandonment of a particular fantasy that guided his or her earlier work-a fantasy that both protected and inhibited the memoirist. Freed from convention, these writers, while close to death, can reinterpret the stories presented in their earlier work, and gain new perspectives on their worlds and existence.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781438427409
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 07/02/2010
Series: SUNY series in Psychoanalysis and Culture
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 175
File size: 272 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Tom Ratekin teaches English at Barnard College.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

1. Finite and Infi nite Games: Terminal Illness and the Genre of the Literary Memoir

2. The Critical Process of Symptom to Sinthome: Allon White’s "Too Close to the Bone"

3. Working through the Four Discourses: Gillian Rose and the Products of Loves Work

4. Harold Brodkey’s Traversal of Fiction: This Wild Darkness as La Passe

5. Modern Frame for the Postmodern Image: Reclaiming the Gaze in Derek Jarman’s Modern Nature and Blue

Conclusion: The Genre of the Unconscious

Notes
Works Cited
Index

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