1st Edition

Julia Kristeva (RLE Feminist Theory)

By John Lechte Copyright 1990
    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    A leading literary critic and psychoanalyst, Julia Kristeva is one of the most significant French thinkers writing today. In this up-to-date survey of her work, John Lechte outlines fully and systematically her intellectual development. He traces it from her work on Bakhtin and the logic of poetic language in the 1960s, through her influential theories of the ‘symbolic’ and the ‘semiotic’ in the 1970s, to her analyses of horror, love, melancholy and cosmopolitanism in the 1980s. He provides an insight into the intellectual and historical context which gave rise to Kristeva’s thought, showing how thinkers such as Roland Barthes, Emile Benviste and Georges Bataille have been important in stimulating her own reflections. He concludes with an overall assessment of Kristeva’s work, looking in particular at her importance for feminism and postmodern thought in general.

    Essential reading for all those who wish to extend their understanding of this important thinker, this first full-length study of Kristeva’s work will be of interest to students of literature, sociology, critical theory, feminist theory, French studies and psychoanalysis.

    Editor’s foreword.  Preface.  Acknowledgements.  Introduction: Julia Kristeva’s intellectual trajectory.  The focus of reading.  Part 1: Context and influences  1. ‘Too French...’?  Setting the intellectual scene.  Frenchness. Thought and its concerns in France.  A paradise for intellectuals?  The other side of reality and the limits of writing.  The missed (Anglo-Franco) encounter  2. The effect of the unconscious.  Language and the unconscious system.  The baroque.  The unconscious as a purloined letter.  The psychoanalytic triangle.  The unconscious as symbolic.  Speaking ‘about’ the unconscious.  The letter as destiny (death) and poetry.  Psychoanalysing Hamlet.  Art and subjectivity.  Joyce and the limits of signification.  The unsymbolizable.  His Majesty’s blindness  3. Towards the semiotic.  Roland Barthes.  Emile Benviste.  Georges Bataille.  Anagrams.  Exile, foreigner and cosmopolitan  Part 2: A reading of Kristeva’s oeuvre  4. Writing. Dialogue.  The infinite  5. The semiotic in poetic language and history.  Painting rhythm.  The ‘semiotic’ and the ‘symbolic’.  The semiotic disposition.  Poetic language in history and society  6. Horror, love, melancholy.  Horror.  Love.  Melancholy  Part 3: Conclusion  7. The importance of Kristeva.  Feminism: for and against.  From modernism to postmodernism?  The power of the analyst?  Art and analysis.  Select bibliography.  Index.

    Biography

    Lechte, John