Insane Passions: Lesbianism and Psychosis in Literature and Film

Ön Kapak
Wesleyan University Press, 12 Ara 2006 - 288 sayfa
In France in 1933, two sisters, presumed to be lovers, murdered the women who employed them as maids. Known as “the Papin affair,” the incident inspired not only Jean Genet's 1947 The Maids but also an essay by Jacques Lacan that presents the sisters' crime as fueled by a narcissistic, homosexual drive that culminated in the assault. In this new investigation of the roots of the twentieth-century myth of the lesbian-as-madwoman, Christine Coffman argues that the female psychotic was the privileged object of Lacan’s effort to derive a revolutionary theory of subjectivity from the study of mental illness. Examining Lacan's early writings, French surrealism, Djuna Barnes’ Nightwood, and H.D.’s homoerotic fiction in light of feminist and queer theory, Insane Passions argues that the psychotic woman that fascinates modernist writers returns with a murderous vengeance in a number of late twentieth-century films—including Basic Instinct, Sister My Sister, Single White Female, and Murderous Maids. Marking the limit of social acceptability, the “psychotic lesbian” repeatedly appears as the screen onto which the violence and madness of twentieth-century life are projected.

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İçindekiler

Writing the Papin Affair
30
Surrealisms Lesbian Doubles
66
What insane passion Djuna Barness Nightwood
103
Prophetess Faced Prophetess Madness and H D s Prose
137
The Late Twentieth Century Filming the Psychotic
191
Notes
211
Works Cited
249
Index
273
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Yazar hakkında (2006)

CHRISTINE E. COFFMAN is an assistant professor in the department of English at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

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