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"Society doesn't exist" : = The brea...
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ProQuest Information and Learning Co.
"Society doesn't exist" : = The breakdown of paternal authority and the illegitimate origins of (post) Oedipal society.
Record Type:
Language materials, manuscript : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
"Society doesn't exist" :/
Reminder of title:
The breakdown of paternal authority and the illegitimate origins of (post) Oedipal society.
Author:
Kilic, Gozde.
Description:
1 online resource (205 pages)
Notes:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 78-05(E), Section: A.
Subject:
Comparative literature. -
Online resource:
click for full text (PQDT)
ISBN:
9781369315547
"Society doesn't exist" : = The breakdown of paternal authority and the illegitimate origins of (post) Oedipal society.
Kilic, Gozde.
"Society doesn't exist" :
The breakdown of paternal authority and the illegitimate origins of (post) Oedipal society. - 1 online resource (205 pages)
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 78-05(E), Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Trent University (Canada), 2017.
Includes bibliographical references
This thesis attempts to provide a psychoanalytic discussion of the institution of paternal authority and its crisis in modernity within a theoretical and literary-historical framework. It proceeds from the psychoanalytic view that far from liberating the subject, the decline of the father's function generates new inhibitions and complexes, and illustrates this with examples from literature, history, and politics. It reads the Freudian Oedipal Father and Lacanian Name-of-the-Father both as symptoms, serving as means of avoiding the libidinal deadlock evoked by the absence of paternal authority. It employs a particular literature on the absurd represented in the works of Franz Kafka's The Trial and Ahmet Hamdi Tanpinar's The Time Regulation Institute in order to explore the inconspicuous effects of this deadlock within the politics of nationalism in modern European and Turkish history. While it approaches Kafka's The Trial as a prophetic text that anticipates the Nazi totalitarian state of the coming decade in its unique fictionalization of the failure of the paternal metaphor, or the Name-of-the-Father, it detects in Tanpinar's The Time Regulation Institute traces of the trauma of Turkish modernization perceived as a half-hearted patricide which is commonly construed in Oedipal terms.
Electronic reproduction.
Ann Arbor, Mich. :
ProQuest,
2018
Mode of access: World Wide Web
ISBN: 9781369315547Subjects--Topical Terms:
835159
Comparative literature.
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
554714
Electronic books.
"Society doesn't exist" : = The breakdown of paternal authority and the illegitimate origins of (post) Oedipal society.
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The breakdown of paternal authority and the illegitimate origins of (post) Oedipal society.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 78-05(E), Section: A.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Trent University (Canada), 2017.
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This thesis attempts to provide a psychoanalytic discussion of the institution of paternal authority and its crisis in modernity within a theoretical and literary-historical framework. It proceeds from the psychoanalytic view that far from liberating the subject, the decline of the father's function generates new inhibitions and complexes, and illustrates this with examples from literature, history, and politics. It reads the Freudian Oedipal Father and Lacanian Name-of-the-Father both as symptoms, serving as means of avoiding the libidinal deadlock evoked by the absence of paternal authority. It employs a particular literature on the absurd represented in the works of Franz Kafka's The Trial and Ahmet Hamdi Tanpinar's The Time Regulation Institute in order to explore the inconspicuous effects of this deadlock within the politics of nationalism in modern European and Turkish history. While it approaches Kafka's The Trial as a prophetic text that anticipates the Nazi totalitarian state of the coming decade in its unique fictionalization of the failure of the paternal metaphor, or the Name-of-the-Father, it detects in Tanpinar's The Time Regulation Institute traces of the trauma of Turkish modernization perceived as a half-hearted patricide which is commonly construed in Oedipal terms.
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Ann Arbor, Mich. :
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=10183299
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click for full text (PQDT)
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