Male Jealousy: Literature and Film
Male Jealousy: Literature and Film is a critical and cultural theory-based study of male jealousy in western culture and its connections with paranoia. By tracing the meanings of jealousy and the representation of jealous men (married or unmarried, heterosexual or homosexual), Lo argues that jealousy is promoted within patriarchy and within what Derrida characterises as logocentricism, where to love is the desire to be loved, and where love cannot be guaranteed in any form of sexual relationship. Contrasting the difference between jealousy and its closely linked concept, envy, this book explores the economy of possession and its relationship to the body, and argues, controversially, that jealousy is an even more modern concept than envy. Informed by critical theory, engaging in particular with Derrida, Deleuze, Freud, Lacan and Kristeva, the study offers close readings of key works by Cervantes, Shakespeare, Proust, Buñuel, Vidor and Almodóvar, in which a spectrum of different forms of jealousy are portrayed.

"1111673773"
Male Jealousy: Literature and Film
Male Jealousy: Literature and Film is a critical and cultural theory-based study of male jealousy in western culture and its connections with paranoia. By tracing the meanings of jealousy and the representation of jealous men (married or unmarried, heterosexual or homosexual), Lo argues that jealousy is promoted within patriarchy and within what Derrida characterises as logocentricism, where to love is the desire to be loved, and where love cannot be guaranteed in any form of sexual relationship. Contrasting the difference between jealousy and its closely linked concept, envy, this book explores the economy of possession and its relationship to the body, and argues, controversially, that jealousy is an even more modern concept than envy. Informed by critical theory, engaging in particular with Derrida, Deleuze, Freud, Lacan and Kristeva, the study offers close readings of key works by Cervantes, Shakespeare, Proust, Buñuel, Vidor and Almodóvar, in which a spectrum of different forms of jealousy are portrayed.

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Male Jealousy: Literature and Film

Male Jealousy: Literature and Film

by Louis Lo
Male Jealousy: Literature and Film

Male Jealousy: Literature and Film

by Louis Lo

Hardcover

$200.00 
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Overview

Male Jealousy: Literature and Film is a critical and cultural theory-based study of male jealousy in western culture and its connections with paranoia. By tracing the meanings of jealousy and the representation of jealous men (married or unmarried, heterosexual or homosexual), Lo argues that jealousy is promoted within patriarchy and within what Derrida characterises as logocentricism, where to love is the desire to be loved, and where love cannot be guaranteed in any form of sexual relationship. Contrasting the difference between jealousy and its closely linked concept, envy, this book explores the economy of possession and its relationship to the body, and argues, controversially, that jealousy is an even more modern concept than envy. Informed by critical theory, engaging in particular with Derrida, Deleuze, Freud, Lacan and Kristeva, the study offers close readings of key works by Cervantes, Shakespeare, Proust, Buñuel, Vidor and Almodóvar, in which a spectrum of different forms of jealousy are portrayed.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826499554
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/08/2008
Series: Continuum Literary Studies
Pages: 198
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Louis Lo is Assistant Professor in the Department of English Language and Literature, Shue Yan University, Hong Kong. He is co-author of a book on Baroque Macau (forthcoming, Hong Kong Univeristy Press) and is currently working on a study of revenge-motifs in literature.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Jealousy and Its Vicissitudes
1. The Politics of Possession in Cervantes' El celoso extremeño (Jealous Old Man From Extremadura)
2. 'I (a Man) Love Him (a Man)': Jealousy and Homosexual Wishful Fantasy in Freud's 'Schreber Case'
3. Jealousy and Curiosity: The Fascinated Eye in Cervantes' El curioso imperinente (The Curious Impertinent)
4. Two Versions of the 'Green-Eyed Monster': Jealousy (Othello) and Envy (Iago)
5. The Siglum of Love: Swann in Jealousy in Proust's Un Amour de Swann (Swann in Love)
6. Allegorizing Sexuality: Jealousy in Proust's À la recherche du temps perdu (In Search of Lost Time)
7. Conclusion: Beyond Jealousy
Bibliography
Index

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