The King & the Adulteress: A Psychoanalytical and Literary Reinterpretation of Madame Bovary and King LearDuke University Press, 1998 - 162 sider The King and the Adulteress brings together two essays that propose radically revisionary readings of two of the most important literary works in the Western canon, Flaubert's Madame Bovary and Shakespeare's King Lear. In offering a new understanding of a deeply sadomasochistic relationship and of an authoritarian pathology, renowned psychoanalyst Roberto Speziale-Bagliacca combines psychoanalysis with literary studies to challenge the conventional judgments of readers and the stereotyped interpretations of literary critics to these masterpieces. Approaching the characters in Bovary and Lear from both an analytic and a critical viewpoint, Speziale-Bagliacca reinterprets many issues and events that involve archetypal figures of modern literary mythology. In fact, he reverses much of the received opinion about them. Charles Bovary, for example, far from being a victim of his wife's neurotic restlessness or the epitome of a passive imbecile, is a masochist of the highest order who makes a decisive contribution to Emma's miserable end. Lear, rather than a tragedy involving the sweet Cordelia, noble Kent, and the Fool as good and loyal supporters of an old king driven to madness by his overbearing evil daughters, is precisely the opposite. The sympathetic understanding of the reader should go, Speziale-Bagliacca suggests, also to Regan, Goneril, and Edmund, while the king, whose crisis is interpreted in the light of psychoanalytic findings on depression, finally becomes the true unbeloved "bastard" of the play. Roberto Speziale-Bagliacca is a psychoanalyst and Professor of Psychotherapy at the Medical School of the University of Genoa. He is the author of On the Shoulders of Freud and many other works. |
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Side 12
... comes to call ? How stubborn of him not to agree to wear a woolen vest ! He really should not eat quite so much . Like a pair of sharpened knives , the two women enjoy scarifying him “ with their remarks and their criticisms [ par leurs ...
... comes to call ? How stubborn of him not to agree to wear a woolen vest ! He really should not eat quite so much . Like a pair of sharpened knives , the two women enjoy scarifying him “ with their remarks and their criticisms [ par leurs ...
Side 62
... come and you think of me , when you are bored and resting your elbow on the table , take a sheet of paper and write down everything , everything that comes into your head . I devoured your letter when it came and have read it several ...
... come and you think of me , when you are bored and resting your elbow on the table , take a sheet of paper and write down everything , everything that comes into your head . I devoured your letter when it came and have read it several ...
Side 83
... come . This is more or less the conclusion that Goneril comes to . Another fact that clinical experience suggests we should not forget is that Lear's spoiled and overbearing attitudes are related to a fragility deriving from serious ...
... come . This is more or less the conclusion that Goneril comes to . Another fact that clinical experience suggests we should not forget is that Lear's spoiled and overbearing attitudes are related to a fragility deriving from serious ...
Indhold
A Wholly Fictitious Story | 54 |
An Essay on King Lear | 81 |
The Barbarous Scythian | 106 |
Copyright | |
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