Description
In this small theoretical novella-cum-dictionary entry, Lauren Berlant engages love and desire in separate entries. In the first entry, Desire mainly describes the feeling one person has for something else: it is organized by psychoanalytic accounts of attachment, and tells briefly the history of their importance in critical theory and practice. The second entry, on Love, begins with an excursion into fantasy, moving away from the parent-child structure so central to psychoanalysis and looking instead at the centrality of context, environment, and history. The entry on Love describes some workings of romance across personal life and commodity culture, the place where subjects start to think about fantasy on behalf of their actual lives.
Whether viewed psychoanalytically, institutionally, or ideologically, love is deemed always an outcome of fantasy. Without fantasy, there would be no love. Desire/Love takes us on a tour of all of the things that sentence might mean.
Author: Lauren Berlant
Publisher: Punctum Books
Published: 12/05/2012
Pages: 142
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.35lbs
Size: 7.90h x 4.90w x 0.50d
ISBN13: 9780615686875
ISBN10: 0615686877
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Gender Studies
About the Author
Lauren Berlant is George M. Pullman Professor of English at the University of Chicago. Her national sentimentality trilogy - The Anatomy of National Fantasy (Chicago, 1991), The Queen of America Goes to Washington City (Duke, 1997), and The Female Complaint (Duke, 2008) - morphed into a quartet with Cruel Optimism (Duke, 2011), which addresses precarious publics and the aesthetics of affective adjustment in the contemporary U.S. and Europe. A co-editor of Critical Inquiry, she is also editor of Intimacy (2000); Our Monica, Ourselves: The Clinton Affair and the National Interest (2001, with Lisa Duggan); Compassion: The Culture and Politics of an Emotion (2004); and On the Case (special issue of Critical Inquiry, 2007). She blogs at Supervalent Thought and is also a founding member of the art/activist group Feel Tank Chicago.
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