CAN THERE BE HAPPINESS IN PSYCHOANALYSIS? CREON AND ANTIGONE IN LACAN´S SEMINAR VII

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dc.contributor.author Balaska, Maria cze
dc.date.accessioned 2019-05-22T08:37:28Z
dc.date.available 2019-05-22T08:37:28Z
dc.date.issued 2018 eng
dc.identifier.issn 0093-3139 eng
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10195/72786
dc.description.abstract This essay shows that despite the psychoanalytic critique of the human search for happiness as futile and illusory, there can still be a positive contribution to the question of happiness from psychoanalysis. To that end, the paper turns to Lacan’s Seminar VII, and more specifically, to the Lacanian “sublimation” as “the happy satisfaction of the instinct.” Whether we can achieve a non-illusory kind of happiness through sublimation or we stay trapped in the pursuit of an illusory happiness depends on the extent to which we succeed or fail in the following two issues: 1. asking whether we have ceded on our desire and 2. accepting that no object of desire can ever be completely satisfying. Lacan offers two examples of a problematic relation to desire: these of Creon and Antigone; Creon fails to ask the question about his desire altogether, while Antigone asks the question but fails to accept that she cannot have it all. A critical reflection of these two cases can allow us to find a positive and sustainable version of happiness in psychoanalysis. eng
dc.format p. 308-329 eng
dc.language.iso eng eng
dc.publisher Johns Hopkins University eng
dc.relation.ispartof College literature : a journal of critical literary studies, volume 45, issue: 2 eng
dc.rights pouze v rámci univerzity eng
dc.subject Feminism eng
dc.subject Happiness eng
dc.subject Ethics eng
dc.subject Psychoanalysis eng
dc.subject Civilization eng
dc.subject Feminism cze
dc.subject Happiness cze
dc.subject Ethics cze
dc.subject Psychoanalysis cze
dc.subject Civilization cze
dc.title CAN THERE BE HAPPINESS IN PSYCHOANALYSIS? CREON AND ANTIGONE IN LACAN´S SEMINAR VII eng
dc.title.alternative CAN THERE BE HAPPINESS IN PSYCHOANALYSIS? CREON AND ANTIGONE IN LACAN´S SEMINAR VII cze
dc.type article eng
dc.description.abstract-translated This essay shows that despite the psychoanalytic critique of the human search for happiness as futile and illusory, there can still be a positive contribution to the question of happiness from psychoanalysis. To that end, the paper turns to Lacan’s Seminar VII, and more specifically, to the Lacanian “sublimation” as “the happy satisfaction of the instinct.” Whether we can achieve a non-illusory kind of happiness through sublimation or we stay trapped in the pursuit of an illusory happiness depends on the extent to which we succeed or fail in the following two issues: 1. asking whether we have ceded on our desire and 2. accepting that no object of desire can ever be completely satisfying. Lacan offers two examples of a problematic relation to desire: these of Creon and Antigone; Creon fails to ask the question about his desire altogether, while Antigone asks the question but fails to accept that she cannot have it all. A critical reflection of these two cases can allow us to find a positive and sustainable version of happiness in psychoanalysis. cze
dc.peerreviewed yes eng
dc.publicationstatus published eng
dc.identifier.doi 10.1353/lit.2018.0019 eng
dc.project.ID EF15_003/0000425/Centrum pro etiku jako studium hodnoty člověka eng
dc.identifier.wos 000430591700006 eng
dc.identifier.obd 39882120 eng


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