1st Edition

Law and Enjoyment Power, Pleasure and Psychoanalysis

By Daniel Hourigan Copyright 2015
    177 Pages
    by Routledge

    177 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book advocates, and develops, a critical account of the relationship between law and the largely neglected issue of ‘enjoyment’. Taking popular culture seriously – as a lived and meaningful basis for a wider understanding of law, beyond the strictures of legal institutions and professional practices – it takes up a range of case studies from film and literature in order to consider how law is iterated through enjoyment, and how enjoyment embodies law. Drawing on psychoanalytic theory, this book addresses issues such as the forced choice to enjoy the law, the biopolitics of tyranny, the enjoyment of law’s contingency, the trauma of the law’s symbolic codification of pleasure, and the futuristic vision of law’s transgression. In so doing, it forges an important case for acknowledging and analyzing the complex relationship between power and pleasure in law – one that will be of considerable interest to legal theorists, as well as those with interests in the intersection of psychoanalytic and cultural theory.

    Introduction  1. Reading the Law with Lacan  2. Law’s Forced Choice (to Enjoy)  3. Law and Contingency  4. Capitalist Subjectivity and the Wissenschaft of Jurisprudence  5. The Master and Knowledge after Nihilism  6. Enjoyment and Restorative Justice  7. Law, Transgression, and The Cares of a Family Man  8. Coraline, or, l’envers de la loi  9. Psyche and Authority  10. The Legal and Erotic in True Blood  11. Power and Jouissance in The City & The City  12. Contract and Conflict in Eve Online  Conclusion

    Biography

    Daniel Hourigan is a Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Southern Queensland, Australia.