Nabokov, Cinemathomme

Vladimir Nabokov famously detested psychoanalysis. He loathed what he regarded as the crudeness of the psychoanalytic imagination and its seemingly universalizing narratives that would track everything back to a single Oedipal source. In Ada, or Ardor, Nabokov's parody of the Joycean writer, Na...

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Main Author: Sigi Jöttkandt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ratnabali Publisher 2018-05-01
Series:Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
Online Access:http://sanglap-journal.in/index.php/sanglap/article/view/166
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spelling doaj-1cadcdd9a06448c39676d66e8f5cafc32020-11-24T23:11:32ZengRatnabali PublisherSanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry2349-80642018-05-014280110165Nabokov, CinemathommeSigi JöttkandtVladimir Nabokov famously detested psychoanalysis. He loathed what he regarded as the crudeness of the psychoanalytic imagination and its seemingly universalizing narratives that would track everything back to a single Oedipal source. In Ada, or Ardor, Nabokov's parody of the Joycean writer, Nabokov nevertheless offers a template for the future of psychoanalytic reading practices in a 21st century characterized by an all-pervasive Imaginary. In this reading, incest provides Nabokov with the conceptual figure for an enjoyment that did not submit to the paternal cut, which floods into the Symbolic through his hybrid literary-cinematic style. Creating a sinthomeof an infinite book from the letters of his name, here Nabokov, as cinemathomme, offers himself pre-eminently as a thinker for what Jacques-Alain Miller has called today's "great disorder of the real".     Keywords: Psychoanalysis; Paternal signifier; Cinema; Incest; Anthropocene.http://sanglap-journal.in/index.php/sanglap/article/view/166
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sigi Jöttkandt
spellingShingle Sigi Jöttkandt
Nabokov, Cinemathomme
Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
author_facet Sigi Jöttkandt
author_sort Sigi Jöttkandt
title Nabokov, Cinemathomme
title_short Nabokov, Cinemathomme
title_full Nabokov, Cinemathomme
title_fullStr Nabokov, Cinemathomme
title_full_unstemmed Nabokov, Cinemathomme
title_sort nabokov, cinemathomme
publisher Ratnabali Publisher
series Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry
issn 2349-8064
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Vladimir Nabokov famously detested psychoanalysis. He loathed what he regarded as the crudeness of the psychoanalytic imagination and its seemingly universalizing narratives that would track everything back to a single Oedipal source. In Ada, or Ardor, Nabokov's parody of the Joycean writer, Nabokov nevertheless offers a template for the future of psychoanalytic reading practices in a 21st century characterized by an all-pervasive Imaginary. In this reading, incest provides Nabokov with the conceptual figure for an enjoyment that did not submit to the paternal cut, which floods into the Symbolic through his hybrid literary-cinematic style. Creating a sinthomeof an infinite book from the letters of his name, here Nabokov, as cinemathomme, offers himself pre-eminently as a thinker for what Jacques-Alain Miller has called today's "great disorder of the real".     Keywords: Psychoanalysis; Paternal signifier; Cinema; Incest; Anthropocene.
url http://sanglap-journal.in/index.php/sanglap/article/view/166
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