Home > General > Lacan and Critical Feminism
35%
Lacan and Critical Feminism

Lacan and Critical Feminism


  • Gray Star
  • Gray Star
  • Gray Star
  • Gray Star
  • Gray Star



Available


About the Book

This book takes a critical feminist approach to Lacan's fundamental concepts, merging discourse and sexuation theories in a novel way for both psychoanalysis and feminism, and exploring the possibility of a feminist subject within a non-masculine logic.

In Lacan and Critical Feminism, Carusi merges Lacan's theories of discourse and sexuation, not only from a gender/sexuality angle, but also from a literary, feminist, and women's studies framework. By drawing examples from literature, film, art, and socio-political movements to focus on discourse and sexuation, the text examines how tropes impact the subject's positionality within any discourse mode. The book also uses women's collective experience and action to illustrate ways that women have repositioned dominant narratives discursively.

This text represents essential reading for researchers interested in the relationship between Lacan and feminist theory.


About the Author:

Rahna McKey Carusi, educational developer in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and Digital Innovation at Massey University, New Zealand.


Best Sellers



Product Details
  • ISBN-13: 9780367197094
  • Publisher: Taylor and Francis
  • Publisher Imprint: Routledge
  • Height: 229 mm
  • No of Pages: 178
  • Series Title: Lines of the Symbolic in Psychoanalysis
  • Sub Title: Subjectivity, Sexuation, and Discourse
  • Width: 150 mm
  • ISBN-10: 036719709X
  • Publisher Date: 01 Jan 2021
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Language: English
  • Returnable: N
  • Spine Width: 23 mm
  • Weight: 304 gr


Similar Products


Write A Review
Write your own book review for Lacan and Critical Feminism
  • Gray Star
  • Gray Star
  • Gray Star
  • Gray Star
  • Gray Star


 

 

Top Reviews
Be the first to write a review on this book Lacan and Critical Feminism

New Arrivals



Inspired by your browsing history