Jacques Lacan

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    butter. He started using different materials from garbage for his art and through his art he tried to help the pickers of the largest landfills near Rio de Genaro. In this analysis I also implement French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan’s view about the society and culture. Jacques Lacan criticized the society and culture because of the lack of sensitivity and creativity in its culture and ideology that continue to be same since many years. Analysis The idea begins with the critical and innovative thinking

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    Voyeurism In The Gaze

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    act of looking becomes a source of relational power. The practice of fixed attention upon something that is appealing to a viewer or that is the object of the image being viewed. The Gaze is a term made known by Jacques Lacan, psychoanalyst and theorist. A legend to film theorists, Lacan provided an understanding of the unconscious desire through the power of images. And how the act of passive voyeurism merely makes one the subject of the gaze ,in turn, making them the spectator. How the spectator

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    Psychoanalytical Criticism

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    Macbeth’s character in William Shakespeare’s play Macbeth. However, before I begin my argument, I feel that Lacan’s concepts of psychoanalytical theory need some introduction. One of the more prevalent psychoanalytical theorists since Freud was Jacques

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    Avis rara I’m proud to be a heterosexual. There. I said it. The outburst was stuck in my throat, I must confess, since Tim Cook, Apple’s super CEO post-Steven Jobs found it in his best interest to declare in public his sexual orientation. I was looking forward to declare mine too, even considering that because of the sexual-confessional content of my first novel, it would hardly come as a surprise. I lie, or at least, I soften it up. Such outburst has been stuck in my throat for much longer, since

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    Narcissism and Metadrama in Richard II      Over the last thirty years, Shakespeare criticism has demonstrated a growing awareness of the self-reflexive or metadramatic elements in his works. Lionel Abel’s 1963 study, Metatheatre: A New View of Dramatic Form, provided perhaps the first significant analysis of the ways in which Shakespeare thematizes theatricality, in the broadest sense of the term, in his tragedies, comedies, and histories. In his discussion of Hamlet, he makes the observation—perhaps

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    parallel between the love story of Trudy and the unnamed fetus resembles the incestuous relationship between that of Hamlet and Gertrude. Through the representation of gender in Nutshell, McEwen reveals theories presented by Sigmund Freud and Jacques Lacan concerning the Oedipus Complex and the role of the phallus. Further, McEwen explores these theories throughout the novel by the intertextuality of themes from Hamlet. The unborn fetus reveals multiple times his love for

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    and Narrative Cinema. In this essay, she claimed that men and women are positioned differently by cinema: men are the subjects who drive the story’s plot, while women are objects solely for male desire. Her theories were heavily influenced by Jacques Lacan and Sigmund Freud, while also including psychoanalysis and feminism. Mulvey used Lacanian psychoanalysis to support her account of gendered subjectivity, visual pleasure, and desire. She is also widely known for her theory of sexual objectification

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    Psychoanalysis of Holden Caulfield

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    Psychoanalysis is a psychoanalytical theory and therapy that aims to treat mental disorders by investigating the conscious and unconscious elements in a human mind by bringing fears to the conscious mind. According to Sigmund Freud, “The unconscious silently directs the thoughts and behavior of the individual” (Freud 95). Holden Caulfield, the main character in J.D Salinger’s novel, The Catcher in the Rye, is sixteen years old and does not act his own age for he is stuck in his own private world

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    Jacques Lacan's graph illustrates three (Imaginary, Real, Symbolic) registers that connect into a triangle. Reality (Phallus) is pictured as in between the Imaginary and the Real. This effect creates an idea of fantasy in the subject. From imaginary to symbolic, lies the representation of unconscious truth. This reveals symbolic identifications throughout their history. Completing the triangle, is Symbolic to Real. Between these two is semblance (le Objet petit a), acting as the object of desire

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    Antigone’s Law: A Critique of Patriarchal Power Structures   The heroine Antigone sacrifices her life to defy the patriarchal society in which she is imprisoned. By confronting and resisting Creon’s authoritarian rule, Antigone empowers the oppressed people of Thebes. On the surface, her motives seem clear; she defies civil law in favor of a higher moral law. Antigone declares she acts out of a sense of honor and obedience to the gods, however her words and actions reveal additional motives

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