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Loading... Writing and Madness: Literature/Philosophy/Psychoanalysisby Shoshana Felman
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Writing and Madness is Shoshana Felman's most influential work of literary theory and criticism. Exploring the relations between literature, philosophy, and psychoanalysis through brilliant studies of Balzac, Nerval, Flaubert, and James, as well as Lacan, Foucault, and Derrida, this book seeks the specificity of literature in its relation to what culture excludes under the label "madness." Why and how do literary writers reclaim the discourse of the madman, and how does this reclaiming reveal something essential about the relation between literature and power, as well as between literature and knowledge? Every literary text continues to communicate with madness--with what has been excluded, decreed abnormal, unacceptable, or senseless--by dramatizing a dynamically revitalized relation between sense and nonsense, reason and unreason, the readable and the unreadable. This revelation of the irreducibility of the relation between the readable and the unreadable constitutes what the author calls la chose littéraire--the literary thing. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)809.93353Literature Literature, rhetoric & criticism History, description, critical appraisal of more than two literatures By topic Other aspects Specific themes and subjects Humanity Human psychological and moral qualitiesLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Writing and Madness was a book that I wanted to like as a whole - its topic is certainly an interesting and timely one - but I found that I could only relate to it in bits and pieces. Felman starts out by articulating the difficulties of speaking madness, as outlined by Michel Foucault in [b:History of Madness|770903|History of Madness|Michel Foucault|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1486327755s/770903.jpg|756961]. She then plunges into the intricacies of the debate between Foucault and Derrida (Ch.2), paying careful attention to how both thinkers problematize questions of writing, philosophy, and literature in their attempts to write about madness. This section is easily one of the best in the book.
Unfortunately, Felman rather loses her way after this point. The chapters on Nerval's Aurelia (Ch.3), Flaubert's Memoirs of a Madman (Ch.4), and Balzac's "The Illustrious Gaudissart" (Ch.5) are dry and technical, and contain few genuinely new insights as far as I was concerned. Maybe others would find them more interesting.
I didn't get much insight, either, from the chapter on Jacques Lacan, which I found to be more verbose than genuinely difficult (Ch.6). Felman's point about the impossibility of Lacan's task, that he appears to be trying to create a universal grammar of the particularities of rhetoric, is an interesting one, but it would have made far more sense to connect this to Alfred Jarry's 'pataphysics, the absurdist "science of the particular." Doing so would have tied what Lacan was doing far more clearly to the issue of madness, which seemed to get lost in a lot of technical considerations.
The substance of Felman's book closes with an extensive meditation on Henry James's The Turn of the Screw (Ch.7). More correctly, it is an analysis of the failure of Edmund Wilson's psychoanalytic interpretation of the text and others like it, with Felman showing how James constructs his text as a "trap" designed not only to capture the unwary, but more especially, the wary, sophisticated reader. At one hundred pages in length, Felman's analysis drags on for far too long, but the last few pages are a superb literary application of Lacan's idea that the "non-dupes err" - namely, that those who think they see the truth are as deluded as those who do not.
The closing chapter and the interview with Miller are too short to be of much interest, but Sollers does a fine job of teasing out the motivations and nuances of Felman's ideas.
On the whole I felt as though Writing and Madness was a major letdown. The opening sections begin with such richness and promise - especially the chapter on the Foucault/Derrida debate - but Felman's decision to proceed after that glorious beginning in the most oblique way possible, through a series of literary readings that nibble around the edges of her original topic, is a major disappointment. I also have to say that I'm not particularly enamored by her style. When she hits on a good idea her prose really soars, but too much of her writing I found to be technical and clever rather than genuinely insightful. ( )