Lost children and imaginary mothers in Sonya Hartnett's Of A Boy


Autoria(s): Muller, Vivienne
Contribuinte(s)

Kelso, Julie

Porter, Marie

Data(s)

2010

Resumo

In Powers of Horror, Julia Kristeva writes about lost children. These are what she calls “dejects,” who, in the psychodrama of subject formation, fail to fully absent the body of the mother, to accept the Law of the Father and the Symbolic, and subsequently to establish “clear boundaries which constitute the object-world for normal subjects.” Dejects are “strays” looking for a place to belong, a place that is bound up with the Imaginary mother of the pre-Oedipal period. Kristeva’s sketch of the deject as one who is unable to negotiate a proper path to the Symbolicis useful to a reading of Hartnett’s Of A Boy (2002),a novel that also deals with lost children and imaginary mothers. However, in its portrayal of children who are doomed to never achieve adulthood, Of A Boy enacts a haunting retrieval of the pre-Oedipal from the dark side of phallocentric representation, privileging the semiotic (Kristeva’s concept) and the maternal as necessary disruptive checks on a patriarchal Symbolic Order.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39738/

Publicador

Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Relação

http://www.c-s-p.org/Flyers/Mother-Texts--Narratives-and-Counter-Narratives1-4438-2332-5.htm

Muller, Vivienne (2010) Lost children and imaginary mothers in Sonya Hartnett's Of A Boy. In Kelso, Julie & Porter, Marie (Eds.) Mother-Texts : Narratives and Counter-Narratives. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Newcastle upon Tyne, pp. 1-18.

Fonte

Creative Writing & Literary Studies; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #200200 CULTURAL STUDIES #200500 LITERARY STUDIES #Psychoanalysis #Kristeva #children #dejects #Harnett
Tipo

Book Chapter