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Cinema, Suffering and Psychoanalysis
Laura Stephenson
其他書名
The Mechanism of Self
出版
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
, 2023-12-14
主題
Performing Arts / Film / History & Criticism
Psychology / General
Psychology / Movements / Psychoanalysis
ISBN
9798765105641
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=G9ffEAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Cinema, Suffering and Psychoanalysis
explores psychological disorder as common to the human condition using a unique three-angled approach: psychoanalysis
recognises
the inherent suffering encountered by each subject due to developmental phases; psychology applies specific
categorisation
to how this suffering manifests; cinema depicts suffering through a combination of video and aural elements.
Functioning as a culturally reflexive medium, the six feature films analysed, including
Black Swan
(2010) and
The Machinist
(2004), represent some of the most common psychological disorders and lived experiences of the contemporary era. This book enters unchartered terrain in cinema scholarship by combining clinical psychology's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual Five (DSM-V) to organise and diagnose each character, and psychoanalysis to track the origin, mechanism and affect of the psychological disorder within the narrative trajectory of each film. Lacan's theories on the infantile mirror phase, the Imaginary, and the Symbolic, Žižek's theories on the Real, the big Other and the Event, and Kristeva's theories on abjection and melancholia work in combination with the DSM's classification of symptoms to interpret six contemporary pieces of cinema.
By taking into consideration that origin, mechanism, affect
and
symptomatology are part of an interconnected group, this book explores psychological disorder as part of the human condition, something which contributes to and informs personal identity. More specifically, this research refutes the notion that psychological disorder and psychological health exist as a binary, instead recognising that what has traditionally been pathologised, may instead be viewed as variations on human identity.