La honte au corps : vers le réel de la performance S/M

Following Eve Sedgwick, Lynda Hart looks into the paradoxical role of shame as what disrupts the narcissistic identification while making possible a renewal of the bond to the other. She thus questions the erotic interest within the context of bodily sadomasochistic performance - the lesbian one in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jacques Brunet-Georget
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Genre, Sexualité et Société 2009-12-01
Series:Genre, Sexualité et Société
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/gss/1024
Description
Summary:Following Eve Sedgwick, Lynda Hart looks into the paradoxical role of shame as what disrupts the narcissistic identification while making possible a renewal of the bond to the other. She thus questions the erotic interest within the context of bodily sadomasochistic performance - the lesbian one in particular. However, her intention to provide a non-ontological, but erotic, definition of shame, is contradicts some of her presuppositions. Using what Lacan calls “hontologie”, and bringing up the psychoanalytical category of the “real”, the point is to define a “shame of living” that is very different from guilt: a way for the subject to go through their identifications so as to feel the limit which sets the substance of their being. The example of Bob Flanagan, the famous “supermasochist”, will allow us to show how a particular experience of shame can contribute to an erotic renewal from the point where a subject finds themselves on the threshold of their own disappearance.
ISSN:2104-3736