the psychoanalysis and pedagogy of discrimination from Shakespeare to Toni Morrison /
Robert Samuels.
Albany :
State University of New York Press,
c2001.
ix, 196 p. ;
24 cm.
SUNY series in psychoanalysis and culture
Includes bibliographical references (p. 183-189) and index.
Introduction -- Racism, sexism, and homophobia in Othello -- The cycle of prejudice in Shakespeare's miscegenating Sonnets -- The Tempest: colonial desire, homophobic racism, and the ideological structures of prejudice -- Frankenstein's homosocial colonial desire -- The heart of darkness and homophobic colonial desire -- Internalized racism and the structures of prejudice in The bluest eye -- Beloved: psychoanalytic cultural criticism and the national unconscious -- Conclusion.
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"Writing Prejudices addresses critical attempts to undermine prejudice through education in general, and literary studies in particular. Robert Samuels argues that these attempts often fail because they do not take into account the different forms of prejudice, the role played by homophobia in racism and sexism, the structure of what Lacan calls symbolic castration, and the unconscious foundations of cultural formations. Addressing these deficiencies, Samuels uses psychoanalytic theory to examine the manifestations of racism, sexism, ethnocentrism, and homophobia in the works of Shakespeare, Mary Shelley, Joseph Conard, and Toni Morrison, showing how these distinct modes of oppression feed off of each other and the diverse ways that cultural critics can work to undermine them."--BOOK JACKET.
Morrison, Toni-- Criticism and interpretation.
Discrimination in literature.
English literature-- History and criticism-- Theory, etc.