The rules of autogeddon : sex death and law in J G Ballard’s Crash


Autoria(s): Thomas, Mark Nicholas Bernard
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

It was reported that the manuscript of Crash was returned to the publisher with a note reading ‘The author is beyond psychiatric help’. Ballard took the lay diagnosis as proof of complete artistic success. Crash conflates the Freudian tropes of libido and thanatos, overlaying these onto the twentieth century erotic icon, the car. Beyond mere incompetent adolescent copulatory fumblings in the back seat of the parental sedan or the clichéd phallic locomotor of the mid-life Ferrari, Ballard engages the full potentialities of the automobile as the locus and sine qua non of a perverse, though functional erotic. ‘Autoeroticism’ is transformed into automotive, traumatic or surgical paraphilia, driving Helmut Newton’s insipid photo-essays of BDSM and orthopædics into an entirely new dimension, dancing precisely where (but more crucially, because) the ‘body is bruised to pleasure soul’. The serendipity of quotidian accidental collisions is supplanted, in pursuit of the fetishised object, by contrived (though not simulated) recreations of iconographic celebrity deaths. Penetration remains as a guiding trope of sexuality, but it is confounded by a perversity of focus. Such an obsessive pursuit of this autoerotic-as-reality necessitates the rejection of the law of human sexual regulation, requiring the re-interpretation of what constitutes sex itself by looking beyond or through conventional sexuality into Ballard’s paraphiliac and nightmarish consensual Other. This Other allows for (if not demands) the tangled wreckage of a sportscar to function as a transformative sexual agent, creating, of woman, a being of ‘free and perverse sexuality, releasing within its dying chromium and leaking engine-parts, all the deviant possibilities of her sex’.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/46155/

Publicador

Griffith University Law School

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/46155/2/46155A.pdf

http://www.griffith.edu.au/criminology-law/griffith-law-review/previous-issues/volume-20-number-2

Thomas, Mark Nicholas Bernard (2011) The rules of autogeddon : sex death and law in J G Ballard’s Crash. Griffith Law Review, 20(2), pp. 333-361.

Direitos

Copyright 2011 Please consult the author.

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Law

Palavras-Chave #180122 Legal Theory Jurisprudence and Legal Interpretation #law and literature #psychoanalysis #posthumanity #technology
Tipo

Journal Article