Achille tra le rose (negli anni di Napoleone). Femminilizzazione del guerriero nella Penthesilea di Heinrich von Kleist

The hypothesis I advance in this article is that the character of Achilles in Heinrich von Kleist’s Penthesilea embodies the Object of desire of the female protagonist, the queen of the Amazons. By the word “Object”, I mean the interiorised and imaginary representation Penthesilea phantasises within...

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Main Author: Massimo Stella
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2021-07-01
Series:Storia delle Donne
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/sdd/article/view/11466
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spelling doaj-994073b09f5247538757887cc6bd00dd2021-08-03T01:14:48ZengFirenze University PressStoria delle Donne1826-75131826-75052021-07-0116110.36253/sd-11466Achille tra le rose (negli anni di Napoleone). Femminilizzazione del guerriero nella Penthesilea di Heinrich von KleistMassimo Stella0Università Ca’ Foscari di VeneziaThe hypothesis I advance in this article is that the character of Achilles in Heinrich von Kleist’s Penthesilea embodies the Object of desire of the female protagonist, the queen of the Amazons. By the word “Object”, I mean the interiorised and imaginary representation Penthesilea phantasises within herself about an otherwise unknown “thing” desired which finally takes the feminine features of a tender and harmless boy wearing crowns and garlands of roses, an “Achilles among the roses”, as it were – the word “rose” being both the anagram of “eros” and the emblem of the female sex. In the course of the analysis, I argue that this “mirage” of Penthesilea, the “thing desired”, is the projection of the “Thing itself”, maternal love, which, being unredeemedly lost to her, turns into a persecutory ghost. My understanding of von Kleist’s Penthesilea is not rooted in Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalysis, but both in the historical and political context in which the tragedy of the queen of the Amazon was conceived and in the transcendental and idealistic philosophy of the Subject. https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/sdd/article/view/11466von KleistPenthesileaAchillestranscendentalismidealismobject
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Massimo Stella
spellingShingle Massimo Stella
Achille tra le rose (negli anni di Napoleone). Femminilizzazione del guerriero nella Penthesilea di Heinrich von Kleist
Storia delle Donne
von Kleist
Penthesilea
Achilles
transcendentalism
idealism
object
author_facet Massimo Stella
author_sort Massimo Stella
title Achille tra le rose (negli anni di Napoleone). Femminilizzazione del guerriero nella Penthesilea di Heinrich von Kleist
title_short Achille tra le rose (negli anni di Napoleone). Femminilizzazione del guerriero nella Penthesilea di Heinrich von Kleist
title_full Achille tra le rose (negli anni di Napoleone). Femminilizzazione del guerriero nella Penthesilea di Heinrich von Kleist
title_fullStr Achille tra le rose (negli anni di Napoleone). Femminilizzazione del guerriero nella Penthesilea di Heinrich von Kleist
title_full_unstemmed Achille tra le rose (negli anni di Napoleone). Femminilizzazione del guerriero nella Penthesilea di Heinrich von Kleist
title_sort achille tra le rose (negli anni di napoleone). femminilizzazione del guerriero nella penthesilea di heinrich von kleist
publisher Firenze University Press
series Storia delle Donne
issn 1826-7513
1826-7505
publishDate 2021-07-01
description The hypothesis I advance in this article is that the character of Achilles in Heinrich von Kleist’s Penthesilea embodies the Object of desire of the female protagonist, the queen of the Amazons. By the word “Object”, I mean the interiorised and imaginary representation Penthesilea phantasises within herself about an otherwise unknown “thing” desired which finally takes the feminine features of a tender and harmless boy wearing crowns and garlands of roses, an “Achilles among the roses”, as it were – the word “rose” being both the anagram of “eros” and the emblem of the female sex. In the course of the analysis, I argue that this “mirage” of Penthesilea, the “thing desired”, is the projection of the “Thing itself”, maternal love, which, being unredeemedly lost to her, turns into a persecutory ghost. My understanding of von Kleist’s Penthesilea is not rooted in Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalysis, but both in the historical and political context in which the tragedy of the queen of the Amazon was conceived and in the transcendental and idealistic philosophy of the Subject.
topic von Kleist
Penthesilea
Achilles
transcendentalism
idealism
object
url https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/sdd/article/view/11466
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