Quixotic Desire: Psychoanalytic Perspectives on CervantesRuth S. El Saffar, Diana de Armas Wilson Cornell University Press, 1993 - 332 pages 'A value of the collection is its multiple trajectory, as commentary on the Cervantine corpus, on authorial and fictional psyches, and on the dialectical (hi)story of literature and psychoanalysis. The editors and their distinguished collaborators have produced a monumental work of scholarship.'--Choice In this venturesome collection, scholars representing a variety of approaches contribute fifteen essays that shed new light not only on the uses of psychoanalysis for reading Cervantes, but also on the relationship between Freud's reading of Cervantes in the summer of 1883 and the very foundation of psychoanalytic paradigms. |
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Contents
Cervantes as Cultural Ancestor of Freud | 23 |
The Archaeology of Desire in Don Quixote | 37 |
Dream Work | 59 |
Cervantes and the Unconscious | 81 |
A Lacanian Reading of | 93 |
Sanchos Jokework | 135 |
Interpolation and Disruption | 155 |
Mad Lovers in Don Quixote | 179 |
The Case | 200 |
Race Text Gender | 227 |
Incorporation and Abjection | 237 |
Misreading and | 255 |
The Phantom of Montilla | 264 |
The Desecration | 292 |
Notes on Contributors | 315 |
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Common terms and phrases
Abraham and Torok Anselmo Artemidorus Artemis Berganza body Camacha Cañizares Cardenio castration Cave of Montesinos Cervantes's Cervantes's text Cervantine character chivalric Cipión Colloquy coloquio comic critical culture desire Diana de Armas discourse dogs Don Quixote Dorotea dream interpreters Dulcinea episode essay fantasy father female feminine Fernando fiction figure Forcione Freudian gender goddess Grisóstomo Imaginary Jacques Jacques Lacan joke Julia Kristeva knight Kristeva Lacan Lacanian language letrados literary literature Lope Lotario Luscinda madness Madrid male Marcela Maria Torok marriage maternal metaphor Miguel de Cervantes mirror mirror stage Montilla mother mujer narrative narrator novel object Oedipus Oneirocritica Panza Persiles phallic Phantom Pretended Aunt psychic psychoanalytic Quixote's readers reading repressed role romance Ruth El Saffar Saavedra Sancho sexual Sierra Morena Sigmund Freud signifier social Spanish story structure symbolic tale Teresa theory Torralba trans unconscious University Press witch woman women words writes Zoraida