Description
Book SynopsisIn this book, William Egginton argues for the centrality of a psychoanalytic notion of interpretation for philosophy and literary theory.
Trade Review"Egginton provides a thorough but theoretical discussion of the notion of interpretation as it relates to literary and philosophical texts. Relying on the work of major literary, psychoanalytic, and cultural critics, Egginton problematizes the idea that authors can be distinct from their interpretations... [A] valuable contribution to the study of literature, literary criticism, psychoanalysis, and cultural studies." --
CHOICE"This tightly wound and carefully crafted treatise reads like wonderful detective fiction. It brings together dominant twentieth-century interpretive practices usually understood to be in opposition to one another in order to focus on a singular object of interpretation they have in common: that of the philosopher's desire. In tying together psychoanalysis, phenomenological hermeneutics, deconstruction, and literary practice, this book makes a significant contribution to the current fields of psychoanalysis and criticism in general and establishes its author as a leading theorist of psychoanalytic commentary." -- Gregg Lambert * Syracuse University *
Table of ContentsTable of Contents: Acknowledgments xxx Prologue: interpretive strings 1 1. The interpretation string The bi-polar logos - The awakening - The fault-line 2. The psychosis string The incommunicable world - The exclusion of the Other / Reality and Uncertainty / Psychosis and interpretation / To space or not to space 3. The purloined string Death and the Signifier / Truth to the letter / The racketeer of truth 4. The temporality string Of time and spacing / Vulgar time / Original time / Memorious time Epilogue: The sense of certainties to come Notes Index