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Archaeologies of Knowledge: Hill's Middens, Heaney's Bogs, Schwerner's Tablets
McHale, Brian
New literary history, 1999-12, Vol.30 (1), p.239-262
[Periódico revisado por pares]
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press
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Título:
Archaeologies of Knowledge: Hill's Middens, Heaney's Bogs, Schwerner's Tablets
Autor:
McHale, Brian
Assuntos:
Archaeological excavation
;
Archaeology
;
Bogs
;
British & Irish literature
;
Chilean literature
;
Collaboration
;
Concrete poetry
;
English literature
;
Epistemology
;
Heaney, Seamus
;
Hill, Geoffrey
;
Hoaxes
;
Hymns
;
Ideology
;
Irish literature
;
Modernist art
;
Modernist poetry
;
Neruda, Pablo (1904-1973)
;
Poetry
;
Postmodernism
;
Psychoanalysis
;
Religious poetry
;
Schwerner, Armand
;
Truth
;
Writing tablets
É parte de:
New literary history, 1999-12, Vol.30 (1), p.239-262
Descrição:
In doing so, in the view of Freudian critics of Freud, such as Donald Spence, he did both psychoanalysis and archaeology a disservice: psychoanalysis, because he burdened it with a master-trope that has subsequently hardened into an ideology; archaeology, because he attributed to it a kind of "scientism" a good deal less sophisticated, hermeneutically speaking, than archaeological procedures and archaeological thought really are. 5 Other critics, more sympathetic to Freud, 6 have observed that the archaeological model of psychoanalytic process alternates in his writing and thought with other, more constructivist models, whereby truth is not recovered by excavating the deep strata of the patient's psyche, but rather constructed in the therapeutic encounter-not so much an archaeological dig, then, as a kind of collaborative novel.
Editor:
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press
Idioma:
Inglês
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