Lacanian Literary Theory
Lacanian literary theory reads texts through Lacan's reworking of Freud, in which the unconscious is structured like a language and the subject is split by its entry into the symbolic order.
Definition
The application of Jacques Lacan's linguistically reformulated psychoanalysis to literature, emphasizing the role of the signifier, desire, and the divided subject in textual meaning.
Scope
This topic covers the literary use of Lacan's key concepts: the mirror stage and the imaginary, the symbolic order and the signifier, the real, desire and lack, and the objet petit a. It treats his famous seminar on Poe's 'The Purloined Letter', the subsequent Lacan-Derrida exchange, and the wider influence of Lacanian thought on feminist, film, and ideology criticism. It presents these concepts as interpretive tools, not clinical doctrine.
Core questions
- What does it mean that the unconscious is 'structured like a language'?
- How do the imaginary, symbolic, and real bear on literary interpretation?
- How does the movement of the signifier organize a narrative such as 'The Purloined Letter'?
- How does Lacanian theory reconceive the literary subject and desire?
Key theories
- The symbolic order and the signifier
- Lacan's thesis that the subject is constituted through language and the 'symbolic order', with the signifier given primacy, so that desire is organized by lack and the chain of signifiers.
- The seminar on the purloined letter
- Lacan's reading of Poe's tale as an allegory of the signifier's determining trajectory, which became a touchstone for Lacanian literary analysis and for debate with deconstruction.
- Reading and insight
- Felman's account of how Lacanian psychoanalysis transforms the practice of reading, locating insight in the transferential relation between text and reader rather than in a content to be decoded.
History
Lacan's 'return to Freud', developed in his seminars from the 1950s and collected in Ecrits (1966), recast psychoanalysis through structural linguistics. His seminar on Poe and the ensuing exchange with Derrida (gathered in The Purloined Poe, 1988) made Lacan central to literary theory. Through Felman, Rose, Zizek, and feminist and film theorists, Lacanian concepts spread widely across the humanities.
Debates
- Lacan versus Derrida on the letter
- The dispute, sparked by Derrida's critique of Lacan's Poe seminar, over whether the signifier reaches a determinate destination or whether meaning is irreducibly dispersed, marking a key encounter between psychoanalysis and deconstruction.
Key figures
- Jacques Lacan
- Shoshana Felman
- Slavoj Zizek
- Jacqueline Rose
Related topics
Seminal works
- lacan1966
- felman1987
- muller1988
Frequently asked questions
- What is the mirror stage?
- The mirror stage is Lacan's account of how an infant forms an illusory unified self-image by identifying with its reflection; literary critics use it to analyze identification, the imaginary, and the construction of the subject.
- Why did Lacan analyze 'The Purloined Letter'?
- Lacan used Poe's story to illustrate how a signifier (the letter) determines the positions and actions of the characters, dramatizing his claim about the primacy of the signifier in the unconscious.