Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Lacan: (But Were Afraid to Ask Hitchcock) (But Were Afraid to Ask Hitchcock)
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Format: Paperback
From: Verso Books
Pub. Date: August 1992
Product Details:
Catalog: Book
Release Date: 1992-09-18
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 288
Ean: 9780860915928
Isbn: 0860915921
ABOUT THE BOOK
'A modernist work of art is by definition 'incomprehensible'; it functions as a shock, as the irruption of a trauma which undermines the complacency of our daily routine and resists being integrated. What postmodernism does, however, is the very opposite: it objects par excellence are products with mass appeal; the aim of the postmodernist treatment is to estrange their initial homeliness: 'you think what you see is a simple melodrama your granny would have no difficulty in following? Yet without taking into account the difference between symptom and sinthom/the structure of the Borromean knot/the fact that Woman is one of the Names-of-the-Father ...you've totally missed the point!' if there is an author whose name epitomises this interpretive pleasure of 'estranging' the most banal content, it is Alfred Hitchcock (and - useless to deny it - this book partakes unrestrainedly in this madness).' Hitchcock is placed on the analyst's couch in this extraordinary volume of case studies, as its contributors bring to bear an unrivalled enthusiasm and theoretical sweep on the entire Hitchcock oeuvre, from Rear Window to Psycho, as an exemplar of 'postmodern' defamiliarization. Starting from the premise that 'everything has meaning', the films' ostensible narrative content and formal procedures are analysed to reveal a rich proliferation of ideological and psychical mechanisms at work. But Hitchcock is here to lure the reader into 'serious' Marxist and Lacanian considerations on the construction of meaning. Timely, provocative and original, this is sure to become a landmark of Hitchcock studies. Contributors: Frederic Jameson, Pascal Bonitzer, Miran Bozovic, Michel Chion, Mlladen Dolar, Stojan Pellko, Renata Salecl, Alenka Zupancic and Slavoj Zizek.
"This book is a great place to start for readers of Lacan or Zizek, and will particularly suit those who are interested in studying film an/or psychoanalytic criticism in depth. The book displays all that is good about Zizek's early work; his canny knack of compiling essays that discuss highly complicated ideas and thoughts in simple fashion, and his humourous delivery and use of anecdotes and popular culture to pep up his writing.
It also thankfully does without the self-repeating and didactic approach of his later, post 9/11 books such as 'Organs Without Bodies'.
Highlights include Alenka Zupancic's excellent essay on 'Murder!' entitled 'A Perfect Place To Die' which also touches on Hamlet and Hitchcock in the theatre; Miran Bozovic's essay 'The Man Behind His Own Retina' and Zizek's own conclusion 'In His Bold Gaze Is My Ruin Writ Large' which tackles 'Psycho' in fine detail.
A fine companion to readers of either Lacan or Hitchcock, and a cool introduction to those who are not."
~ Written on 2004-08-30