Taboo Subjects: Race, Sex, and Psychoanalysis

Taboo Subjects: Race, Sex, and Psychoanalysis

by Gwen Bergner
Taboo Subjects: Race, Sex, and Psychoanalysis

Taboo Subjects: Race, Sex, and Psychoanalysis

by Gwen Bergner

Paperback(First edition)

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Overview

In American literature, a traumatic scene of racial and sexual awakening - frequently involving photographs, mirrors, or acts of witnessing - often precipitates a character's "discovery" of racial identity. Similarly, in the annals of psychoanalysis, notions of self and sexual identity often arise from visual trauma such as the mirror stage and primal scene. Noting this parallel between specular births of racial and sexual subjectivity, Gwen Bergner uses a comparative analysis of psychoanalytic theory and American literature to develop a theory of racialization - the process through which individuals assume an identity as black or white. Examining the primal scenes of double consciousness in works by Frederick Douglass, William Faulkner, and Toni Morrison, among others, alongside the formative visual traumas of psychoanalytic theory of Lacan and Freud, Taboo Subjects reveals how literature disrupts psychoanalysis's conventional models of race and gender identification, forcing a reconfiguration of many foundational psychoanalytic texts. And from psychoanalysis Bergner derives a critical vocabulary for theorizing racialization as it intersects with sex and gender, for both black and white Americans.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780816640683
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication date: 03/20/2005
Edition description: First edition
Pages: 244
Product dimensions: 5.88(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Gwen Bergner is associate professor of English at West Virginia University. She is a contributor to The Psychoanalysis of Race and Frantz Fanon: Critical Perspectives, and served as coeditor of Critical Matrix: The Princeton Journal of Women, Gender, and Culture from 1991 to 1993.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: Primal Scenes of Double Consciousness 1. Who Is That Masked Woman? Gender and Frantz Fanon 2. Myths of Masculinity: Frederick Douglass and the Oedipus Complex 3. The Mulatto and the Miscegenation Taboo: Nella Larsen's Ambivalent Subject 4. Blackness and Class Difference in William Faulkner 5. Rites and Responsibilities: Toni Morrison and Object Relations Afterword: Biracial/Multiracial-New Subject? Notes Works Cited Index
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