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황무지의 언어 무의식 : The Linguistic Unconscious of The Waste Land

DC Field Value Language
dc.contributor.author이정호-
dc.date.accessioned2010-01-11T01:12:23Z-
dc.date.available2010-01-11T01:12:23Z-
dc.date.issued1997-
dc.identifier.citation인문논총, Vol.37, pp. 23-40-
dc.identifier.issn1598-3021-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/29259-
dc.description.abstractThe Waste Land has been read from different approaches and in diverse ways. The body of criticism on this poem from a psychoanalytic viewpoint, however, is not as copious as that of other approaches. One reason why there is very scanty body of criticism on this poem from a psychoanalytic approach is that Eliot himself has evinced a strong aversion to psychoanalysis. In my opinion, the fact that Eliot himself did not like psychoanalysis will be the stronger reason for us to read it form such an approach. Jacques Lacan's psychoanalytic theory, however, can be a great help in reading The Waste Land in this respect, because Lacanian approach emphasizes the linguistic aspect of the unconscious. The Waste Land is very amenable to the Lacanian psychoanalysis because Lacan basically considers the unconscious to be structured like a language. The poem demonstrates that it is a text of the linguistic unconscious from the beginning by its two quotations-one of the sybil, and the other for Ezra Pound. These two quotations show that the unconscious of the poem is situated at the locus of the conflict between the imaginary and the symbolic. Many gaps in the poem itself prove that this assumption is not far from the truth.-
dc.language.isoko-
dc.publisher서울대학교 인문대학 인문학연구소-
dc.title황무지의 언어 무의식-
dc.title.alternativeThe Linguistic Unconscious of The Waste Land-
dc.typeSNU Journal-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorLee, Chong-Ho-
dc.citation.journaltitle인문논총(Journal of humanities)-
dc.citation.endpage40-
dc.citation.pages23-40-
dc.citation.startpage23-
dc.citation.volume37-
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