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텍스트의 욕망 읽기 : 영문학 텍스트를 읽기 위한 라캉의 정신분석학적 패러다임 : Reading the Desire of the Text: A Lacanian Psychoanalytic Paradigm for Reading English Literary Texts

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Authors

이정호

Issue Date
2004
Publisher
서울대학교 인문대학 인문학연구원
Citation
인문논총, Vol.51, pp. 211-235
Keywords
욕망텍스트워더링 하이츠황무지피네간의 경야결핍
Abstract
How does the text desire? To answer this question we have to know what desire
means in Lacanian psychoanalysis. What Lacan means by desire is the lack or gap
in existence. He maintains that desire is the metonymy of the lack of being
(manque à être, want-to-be, Écrits 259). In this respect, desire comes into being as a
result of the flaw of human existence. Therefore, we can have the following axiom:
a human being is the lack of being, therefore he desires. So it is quite natural for a
human being to desire.
If so, how can the text desire? The best proof that a human being is a being of
lack is shown by language. Once a human being enters the Symbolic order after
the mirror stage, he truly becomes a being of lack. Since the Symbolic order makes
a subject fragmented, he has to suppress his desire, and his repressed desire is
stored in the unconscious. Thus the best place to find the contents of the repressed
desire is the unconscious. But it is hard to examine the unconscious. One way to
see how the unconscious works is through dreams. Dreams can be read through
language. Sometimes literary texts are the representation of the dream versions of
the writers. By examining these literary texts, we can see the traces of the repressed desire of the writers.
In this article three writers are chosen to see how the text desires. These are
Emily Brontë, James Joyce, and T. S. Eliot. Dreams of Lockwood, the narrator of
Wuthering Heights, can be seen as displacement of Brontës suppressed desire as a
woman writer. In the case of James Joyce, we can see how the text desires through
his use of portmanteau words. One good example is the portmanteau word,
cropse, which is the combination of crops and corpse. These two words have
totally opposite meanings, but they are collapsed into one word to show how they
co-exist in the unconscious level. On the other hand, Eliots use of corpse in The
Waste Land is a very interesting example in that it shows how he uses language
according to the syntagmatic principle of the Symbolic order.
ISSN
1598-3021
Language
Korean
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/29493
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