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Reaction Formations : the Creation of the Modern Unconscious.

Bakhtin and Voloshinov argued that dialogue is the intersubjective basis of consciousness, and of the creativity which makes historical changes in consciousness possible. The multiple dialogical relationships give every subject, who has developed through internalising them, the potential to distance...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Hall, Jonathan
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Boston : BRILL, 2019.
Colección:Issn Ser.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo

MARC

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505 0 |a Intro; Reaction Formations: Dialogism, Ideology, and Capitalist Culture: The Creation of the Modern Unconscious; Copyright; Contents; Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1 Dialogism: the Potential for Change and for Resistance to Change; 1 The Sources of ""Becoming"" in Philosophical Idealism; 2 ""Becoming"" as Socio-linguistic Event; 3 Towards a Historical Account of the Unconscious?; 4 From Literary Dialogism to Dialectical ""Becoming; 5 ""Speech Genres"" and Creativity; 6 Anticipation and Prevention: the Problem of Temporality; 7 Conclusion 
505 8 |a 2 The Fissured Modern Subject: Paradox versus ""Becoming"" in Dostoevsky's Notes from Underground1 Dialogical ""Becoming"" or Frozen Dialectic?; 2 The Ethics of Capitalism; 3 The Internal Catastrophe; 4 The Prison House of Paradox; 5 A Modern Liar's Paradox; 6 An Unconscious within Hyperconsciousness?; 7 Revolutionary Dreams or Literary Nostalgia?; 8 Dialogism Violated; 9 Literature and the Social Unconscious; 3 Rethinking Ideology as a Field of Dialogical Conflict; 1 Bakhtin's Developmental Model; 2 The Authority Concealed in the Utterance 
505 8 |a 3 The Idea of a Single Ideology Is Itself Ideological4 Ideological Conflict and the Production of the Unconscious; 5 The Dialectics of Repression; 6 Interpellation Revisited; 7 The Relationship of Dialogism and Dialectics; 4 A Contradictory Symbiosis is Born: the Rival Ideologies of the Market and the State under Capitalism; 1 The Rival Myths of Nature in Bourgeois Ideology; 2 The Capitalist Double-bind and the Displacement of Guilt; 3 Social Contradiction Internalised; 4 Loyalty versus Law: a Buried History; 5 Market Addressivity: Capitalism without Guilt? 
505 8 |a 6 The Market's Need for Permanent Non-satisfaction7 Conclusion; 5 Captivating the Unruly Subject: Ideology in Early Modern Europe; 1 Monetarisation and the Crisis of Identity; 2 The Symbolic Divinisation of the State; 3 Royal Charisma: a Concealed Contradiction in the Baroque Spectacle; 4 The ""Theatricality"" of Power?; 5 Capturing the Will to Believe; 6 The Solar Theatricality of Absolutism in Shakespeare's Henriad; 7 From Solar Absolutism to ""Charismatic"" Seduction; 8 Carnival and Charisma: the Concealed Connection; 9 Carnival and Dialectics 
505 8 |a 10 Anticipation, Prevention, and Unconscious Guilt6 Repairing the Universe: Mysticism as Loss and Longing; 1 The Reactionary Activist: a Serious Quijote?; 2 Textual Authority: from Desire to Method; 3 Transverberation: the Divine Word Reincarnated; 4 Conclusion: from Mysticism to ""Modernity; 7 Baroque Incompletion, the Captivated Subject, and the Humour of Don Quijote; 1 Theatrical Addressivity; 2 The Comic Counter-discourse; 3 Capturing the Spectator's Desire; 4 Baroque Incompletion; 5 The Aesthetics of ""Becoming"" versus Timeless Form; 6 A Comic Great Theatre of the World 
500 |a 7 The Captivated Reader 
520 |a Bakhtin and Voloshinov argued that dialogue is the intersubjective basis of consciousness, and of the creativity which makes historical changes in consciousness possible. The multiple dialogical relationships give every subject, who has developed through internalising them, the potential to distance him or herself from them. Consciousness is therefore an "unfinalised" process, always open to a possible future which would not merely reiterate the past. But this book explores its corollary: The relative openness is a field of conflict where rival discourses struggle for hegemony, by subordinating or eliminating their rivals. That is how the unconscious is created out of socio-historical conflicts. Hegemony is always incomplete, because there is always the possibility of a return of its repressed rivals in new combinations. 
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