Sex Drives: Fantasies of Fascism in Literary Modernism

Portada
Cornell University Press, 2002 - 197 páginas

Salvador Dalí's autobiography confesses that "Hitler turned me on in the highest," while Sylvia Plath maintains that "every woman adores a Fascist." Susan Sontag's famous observation that art reveals the seamier side of fascism in bondage, discipline, and sexual deviance would certainly appear to be true in modernist and postwar literary texts. How do we account for eroticized representations of fascism in anti-fascist literature, for sexual desire that escapes the bounds of politics?Laura Frost advances a compelling reading of works by D. H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, Jean Genet, Georges Bataille, Marguerite Duras, and Sylvia Plath, paying special attention to undercurrents of enthrallment with tyrants, uniforms, and domination. She argues that the first generation of writers raised within psychoanalytic discourse found in fascism the libidinal unconscious through which to fantasize acts--including sadomasochism and homosexuality--not permitted in a democratic conception of sexuality without power relations. By delineating democracy's investment in a sexually transgressive fascism, an investment that persists to this day, Frost demonstrates how politics enters into fantasy. This provocative and closely-argued book offers both a fresh contribution to modernist literature and a theorization of fantasy.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

The Origins of an Erotics
29
Chapter 2
38
Chapter 3
59
Derechos de autor

Otras 4 secciones no mostradas

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Referencias a este libro

Acerca del autor (2002)

Laura Frost is Associate Professor of English at Yale University.

Información bibliográfica