Primitivity, the repressed culture and the lost object of desire: A pyschoanalytic analysis of Nick Joaquin's short fiction

This thesis explores the ways in which Lacanian concepts might be used to understand the role of pre-colonial culture in selected short stories (specifically) Three generations , May day eve , Mass of Saint Sylvestre and Summer solstice written by Nick Joaquin. It will argue that the narratives goth...

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Main Author: Sales, Michael Justine D. J.
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Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2017
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_honors/396
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_honors-13952021-04-28T05:50:59Z Primitivity, the repressed culture and the lost object of desire: A pyschoanalytic analysis of Nick Joaquin's short fiction Sales, Michael Justine D. J. This thesis explores the ways in which Lacanian concepts might be used to understand the role of pre-colonial culture in selected short stories (specifically) Three generations , May day eve , Mass of Saint Sylvestre and Summer solstice written by Nick Joaquin. It will argue that the narratives gothic understones guise the existence of paganist and primitive culture as the return of the repressed-- aspects of pre-colonial culture expelled yet nevertheless existing in the new social order through metaphorical relations. Tensions in the narratives arise from the co-existence of pre-colonial and colonial culture and they occur side-by-side with the conflicts in the narratives. The thesis will also argue that these selected stories deal with specific objects of desire and various psychological dilemmas. Hence, concepts such as objet petit a, imaginary fixation, the symbolic, repetition compulsion, melancholia and female represssion will be used to articulate the kind of psychological dysfunctions that these works are essentially dealing with. For Three generations it is the failure to resolve a troubled past in May day eve and Mass of Saint Sylvestre fixation with Lacanarian imaginary and melancholia for the former lastly, female repression in Summer solstice. The primary goal of this thesis is to bridge the gap in criticism by observing and analyzing the intimate connections of the psyche with its cultural condition. Hence the goal of dissecting post-colonial ideas imbibed in these works through Lacanian and post-Lacanian concepts. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_honors/396 Honors Theses English Animo Repository Philippine fiction--History and criticism
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Philippine fiction--History and criticism
spellingShingle Philippine fiction--History and criticism
Sales, Michael Justine D. J.
Primitivity, the repressed culture and the lost object of desire: A pyschoanalytic analysis of Nick Joaquin's short fiction
description This thesis explores the ways in which Lacanian concepts might be used to understand the role of pre-colonial culture in selected short stories (specifically) Three generations , May day eve , Mass of Saint Sylvestre and Summer solstice written by Nick Joaquin. It will argue that the narratives gothic understones guise the existence of paganist and primitive culture as the return of the repressed-- aspects of pre-colonial culture expelled yet nevertheless existing in the new social order through metaphorical relations. Tensions in the narratives arise from the co-existence of pre-colonial and colonial culture and they occur side-by-side with the conflicts in the narratives. The thesis will also argue that these selected stories deal with specific objects of desire and various psychological dilemmas. Hence, concepts such as objet petit a, imaginary fixation, the symbolic, repetition compulsion, melancholia and female represssion will be used to articulate the kind of psychological dysfunctions that these works are essentially dealing with. For Three generations it is the failure to resolve a troubled past in May day eve and Mass of Saint Sylvestre fixation with Lacanarian imaginary and melancholia for the former lastly, female repression in Summer solstice. The primary goal of this thesis is to bridge the gap in criticism by observing and analyzing the intimate connections of the psyche with its cultural condition. Hence the goal of dissecting post-colonial ideas imbibed in these works through Lacanian and post-Lacanian concepts.
format text
author Sales, Michael Justine D. J.
author_facet Sales, Michael Justine D. J.
author_sort Sales, Michael Justine D. J.
title Primitivity, the repressed culture and the lost object of desire: A pyschoanalytic analysis of Nick Joaquin's short fiction
title_short Primitivity, the repressed culture and the lost object of desire: A pyschoanalytic analysis of Nick Joaquin's short fiction
title_full Primitivity, the repressed culture and the lost object of desire: A pyschoanalytic analysis of Nick Joaquin's short fiction
title_fullStr Primitivity, the repressed culture and the lost object of desire: A pyschoanalytic analysis of Nick Joaquin's short fiction
title_full_unstemmed Primitivity, the repressed culture and the lost object of desire: A pyschoanalytic analysis of Nick Joaquin's short fiction
title_sort primitivity, the repressed culture and the lost object of desire: a pyschoanalytic analysis of nick joaquin's short fiction
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2017
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_honors/396
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