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E-book
Author Schapiro, Barbara A., author.

Title Literature and the relational self / Barbara Ann Schapiro
Published New York : New York University Press, [1994]

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Description 1 online resource
Series Literature and psychoanalysis ; 3
Literature and psychoanalysis ; 3.
Contents Foreword / Jeffrey Berman -- 1. Introduction. The Relational Paradigm. Psychoanalytic Relational Concepts: An Overview. The Relational Model and Feminist Theory. Transitional Phenomena, Creativity, and Culture. Applications to Literary Criticism -- 2. Wordsworth and the Relational Model of Mind -- 3. The Rebirth of Catherine Earnshaw: Splitting and Reintegration of Self in Wuthering Heights -- 4. Gender, Self, and the Relational Matrix: D.H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf -- 5. Boundaries and Betrayal in Jean Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea -- 6. Updike, God, and Women: The Drama of the Gifted Child -- 7. Internal World and the Social Environment: Toni Morrison's Beloved -- 8. Ann Beattie and the Culture of Narcissism -- 9. Desire and Uses of Illusion: Alice Hoffman's Seventh Heaven -- 10. Afterword
Summary While psychoanalytic relational perspectives have had a major impact on the clinical world, their value for the field of literary study has yet to be fully recognized. This important book offers a broad overview of relational concepts and theories, and it examines their implications for understanding literary and aesthetic experience. The author reviews feminist applications of relational-model theories, and considers D.W. Winnicott's influential ideas about creativity and symbolic play. The eight incisive essays in this volume apply these concepts to a close reading of various nineteenth- and twentieth-century literary texts: an essay on Wordsworth, for instance, explores the poet's writing on the imagination in light of Winnicott's ideas about transitional phenomena, while an essay on Woolf and Lawrence compares identity issues in their work from the perspective of feminist object relations theories
The relational paradigm, as a present-day development, is also particularly relevant to contemporary literature. Essays on John Updike, Toni Morrison, Ann Beattie, and Alice Hoffman examine self-other relational dynamics in their texts that reflect larger cultural patterns characteristic of our time
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-196) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Psychoanalysis and literature.
Self in literature.
Object relations (Psychoanalysis) in literature.
Interpersonal relations in literature.
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY -- Literary.
Interpersonal relations in literature
Object relations (Psychoanalysis) in literature
Psychoanalysis and literature
Self in literature
Literatur
Psychoanalyse
Selbst
Englisch
USA
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780814788738
0814788734