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La madre muerta: El mito matricida en la literatura y el cine españoles
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La madre muerta: El mito matricida en la literatura y el cine españoles
Current price: $65.00
Barnes and Noble
La madre muerta: El mito matricida en la literatura y el cine españoles
Current price: $65.00
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Drawing on feminist psychoanalysis and Greek mythology,
La madre muerta
explores how matricide and unconscious matricidal fantasies have been portrayed in Spanish narrative, drama, and film. The book examines individual and social perceptions regarding gendered subjectivity, the operation of power relations, gender violence, and the economies of desire. It provides a comparative study of different theoretical approaches to matricide and a close reading of five films
Furtivos
(1975) by Jose Luis Borau,
Sonambulos
(1978) by Manuel Gutierrez Aragon,
(1993) by Juanma Bajo Ulloa,
La madre
(1995) by Miguel Bardem, and
Los ojos de Julia
(2010) by Guillem Morales; three novels
La familia de Pascual Duarte
(1942) by Camilo Jose Cela,
Isabel and Maria
(1992) by Merce Rodoreda, and
La intimidad
(1997) by Nuria Amat; and two plays
Clitemnestra
(1986) by Maria Jose Rague i Arias, and
La reivindicacio de la senyora Clito Mestres
(1990) by Monserrat Roig. This study attempts to unveil the mechanisms by which the matricidal myth has been introduced and continues operative in twentieth and twenty-first century Spanish literature and film. It also explores the process of continuous reprojection of a phobic, monstrous mother figure associated with danger, persecution, and abjection, and suggests that the male fantasy of matricide does not necessarily reveal itself in the literal murder of the mother, but it is projected onto other women, thus leading to various acts of gender violence. In this study, Gomez claims that the absence of a positive symbolic mediation with the maternal body is detrimental for the configuration of gendered identities.
La madre muerta
explores how matricide and unconscious matricidal fantasies have been portrayed in Spanish narrative, drama, and film. The book examines individual and social perceptions regarding gendered subjectivity, the operation of power relations, gender violence, and the economies of desire. It provides a comparative study of different theoretical approaches to matricide and a close reading of five films
Furtivos
(1975) by Jose Luis Borau,
Sonambulos
(1978) by Manuel Gutierrez Aragon,
(1993) by Juanma Bajo Ulloa,
La madre
(1995) by Miguel Bardem, and
Los ojos de Julia
(2010) by Guillem Morales; three novels
La familia de Pascual Duarte
(1942) by Camilo Jose Cela,
Isabel and Maria
(1992) by Merce Rodoreda, and
La intimidad
(1997) by Nuria Amat; and two plays
Clitemnestra
(1986) by Maria Jose Rague i Arias, and
La reivindicacio de la senyora Clito Mestres
(1990) by Monserrat Roig. This study attempts to unveil the mechanisms by which the matricidal myth has been introduced and continues operative in twentieth and twenty-first century Spanish literature and film. It also explores the process of continuous reprojection of a phobic, monstrous mother figure associated with danger, persecution, and abjection, and suggests that the male fantasy of matricide does not necessarily reveal itself in the literal murder of the mother, but it is projected onto other women, thus leading to various acts of gender violence. In this study, Gomez claims that the absence of a positive symbolic mediation with the maternal body is detrimental for the configuration of gendered identities.