Anticipation: how does Literature Create its Limits through Reading and Writing?

p. 77-86

Abstract

In this paper we elaborate Lacan's theory on courtly love to establish a link between literature, psychoanalytic practice and psychoanalytic theory. Lacan himself had already established the link between courtly love and psychoanalytic practice as a way of working through the mourning for the structural lack in the Symbolic order. As such, both can be seen as an anticipation of anticipation: not the object itself is anticipated, but rather the anticipation of this object. Through the use of Stiegler's (2010) reinterpretation of the concept of the pharmakon we understand psychoanalytic theory and literature in general as attempts to work through this mourning by creating an anamnesis, a "long circuit" of knowledge in which the creators are implied with their own subjectivity. An analysis of Graham Swift's novel Ever After and of Italo Calvino's novel If on a winter's night a traveler demonstrate how this principle applies to the processes of writing and reading.

Text

Download Facsimile [PDF, 4.8M]

References

Bibliographical reference

David Schrans, Filip Geerardyn and Wim Matthys, « Anticipation: how does Literature Create its Limits through Reading and Writing? », CASYS, 29 | 2014, 77-86.

Electronic reference

David Schrans, Filip Geerardyn and Wim Matthys, « Anticipation: how does Literature Create its Limits through Reading and Writing? », CASYS [Online], 29 | 2014, Online since 30 September 2024, connection on 14 November 2024. URL : http://popups.lib.uliege.be/1373-5411/index.php?id=3805

Authors

David Schrans

sychoanalytic Psychotherapist in Private Practice, François Benaerdstraat 42, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium

By this author

Filip Geerardyn

Ghent University, Department of Psychoanalysis and Clinical consulting, H. Dunantlaan, 2, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium

By this author

Wim Matthys

Ghent University, Department of Psychoanalysis and Clinical consulting, H. Dunantlaan, 2, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium

By this author

Copyright

CC BY-SA 4.0 Deed