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Intoxication, modernity, and colonia...
~
Bjelic, Dusan I.
Intoxication, modernity, and colonialism[electronic resource] :Freud's industrial unconscious, Benjamin's hashish mimesis /
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
杜威分類號:
150.1952
書名/作者:
Intoxication, modernity, and colonialism : Freud's industrial unconscious, Benjamin's hashish mimesis // by Dusan I. Bjelic.
作者:
Bjelic, Dusan I.
出版者:
New York : : Palgrave Macmillan US :, 2016.
面頁冊數:
ix, 307 p. : : ill., digital ;; 24 cm.
Contained By:
Springer eBooks
標題:
Psychology.
標題:
Civilization - History.
標題:
Drug abuse - History.
標題:
Psychoanalysis.
標題:
Religion and culture.
標題:
Self.
標題:
Critical Psychology.
標題:
Sociology of Culture.
標題:
Cultural History.
標題:
Self and Identity.
ISBN:
9781137588562
ISBN:
9781349950720
內容註:
Introduction -- 1. On Cocaine's radical ambiguity -- 2. Freud's 'Cocaine Episode' -- 3. From Colonial to Sexual Conversion: Freud as 'Woman' -- 4. Freud as 'Conquistador' of the Underworld and as 'Bosnian Turk' -- 5. Freud on the Acropolis: Between Oedipus and 'Little Moor' Conclusion.
摘要、提要註:
This book depicts how Freud's cocaine and Benjamin's hashish illustrate two different critiques of modernity and two different messianic emancipations through the pleasures of intoxicating discourse. Freud discovered the "libido" and "unconscious" in the industrial mimetic scheme of cocaine, whereas Benjamin found an inspiration for his critique of phantasmagoria and of its variant psychoanalysis in hashish's mimesis. As part of the history of colonialism, both drugs generated two different colonial discourses and, consequently, two different understandings of the emancipatory powers of pleasure, the unconscious and dreams. Processing cocaine as an undisclosed industrialized scheme of euphoric pleasure, Freud constructed psychoanalysis by infusing its concepts with the residue of cocaine's euphoria while foreclosing cocaine's double colonialism--its external colonialism, i.e. of Peru, and its internal colonialism, i.e. of the coca plant--by industrial chemistry. On the other hand, considering the mimetic powers of Benjamin's hashish intoxication as an antidote to the intoxicating power of the industrial phantasmagoria while at the same time an industrial colonization of nerves, allows for an opening up of Freud's cocaine language to the critique of his double unconscious, colonial and industrial.
電子資源:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-58856-2
Intoxication, modernity, and colonialism[electronic resource] :Freud's industrial unconscious, Benjamin's hashish mimesis /
Bjelic, Dusan I.
Intoxication, modernity, and colonialism
Freud's industrial unconscious, Benjamin's hashish mimesis /[electronic resource] :by Dusan I. Bjelic. - New York :Palgrave Macmillan US :2016. - ix, 307 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
Introduction -- 1. On Cocaine's radical ambiguity -- 2. Freud's 'Cocaine Episode' -- 3. From Colonial to Sexual Conversion: Freud as 'Woman' -- 4. Freud as 'Conquistador' of the Underworld and as 'Bosnian Turk' -- 5. Freud on the Acropolis: Between Oedipus and 'Little Moor' Conclusion.
This book depicts how Freud's cocaine and Benjamin's hashish illustrate two different critiques of modernity and two different messianic emancipations through the pleasures of intoxicating discourse. Freud discovered the "libido" and "unconscious" in the industrial mimetic scheme of cocaine, whereas Benjamin found an inspiration for his critique of phantasmagoria and of its variant psychoanalysis in hashish's mimesis. As part of the history of colonialism, both drugs generated two different colonial discourses and, consequently, two different understandings of the emancipatory powers of pleasure, the unconscious and dreams. Processing cocaine as an undisclosed industrialized scheme of euphoric pleasure, Freud constructed psychoanalysis by infusing its concepts with the residue of cocaine's euphoria while foreclosing cocaine's double colonialism--its external colonialism, i.e. of Peru, and its internal colonialism, i.e. of the coca plant--by industrial chemistry. On the other hand, considering the mimetic powers of Benjamin's hashish intoxication as an antidote to the intoxicating power of the industrial phantasmagoria while at the same time an industrial colonization of nerves, allows for an opening up of Freud's cocaine language to the critique of his double unconscious, colonial and industrial.
ISBN: 9781137588562
Standard No.: 10.1057/978-1-137-58856-2doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
180630
Psychology.
LC Class. No.: BF39.9
Dewey Class. No.: 150.1952
Intoxication, modernity, and colonialism[electronic resource] :Freud's industrial unconscious, Benjamin's hashish mimesis /
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Introduction -- 1. On Cocaine's radical ambiguity -- 2. Freud's 'Cocaine Episode' -- 3. From Colonial to Sexual Conversion: Freud as 'Woman' -- 4. Freud as 'Conquistador' of the Underworld and as 'Bosnian Turk' -- 5. Freud on the Acropolis: Between Oedipus and 'Little Moor' Conclusion.
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This book depicts how Freud's cocaine and Benjamin's hashish illustrate two different critiques of modernity and two different messianic emancipations through the pleasures of intoxicating discourse. Freud discovered the "libido" and "unconscious" in the industrial mimetic scheme of cocaine, whereas Benjamin found an inspiration for his critique of phantasmagoria and of its variant psychoanalysis in hashish's mimesis. As part of the history of colonialism, both drugs generated two different colonial discourses and, consequently, two different understandings of the emancipatory powers of pleasure, the unconscious and dreams. Processing cocaine as an undisclosed industrialized scheme of euphoric pleasure, Freud constructed psychoanalysis by infusing its concepts with the residue of cocaine's euphoria while foreclosing cocaine's double colonialism--its external colonialism, i.e. of Peru, and its internal colonialism, i.e. of the coca plant--by industrial chemistry. On the other hand, considering the mimetic powers of Benjamin's hashish intoxication as an antidote to the intoxicating power of the industrial phantasmagoria while at the same time an industrial colonization of nerves, allows for an opening up of Freud's cocaine language to the critique of his double unconscious, colonial and industrial.
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