Changes

Jump to: navigation, search
no edit summary
[[Category:Works]]
[[Category:Books]]
[[Category:Žižek]]
[[Category:Psychoanalysis]]




Žižek, S. (ed.) (1992) Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Lacan
(But Were Afraid to Ask Hitchcock), London and New York: Verso.
As loyal Žižek readers will know, no Žižek book is complete without
a reference to an Alfred Hitchcock film. Here, what is usually just an
incidental affection for the director's work is expanded to a book-
length passion. Žižek and the other authors in this volume (including
Fredric Jameson and Mladen Dolar) adopt what Žižek describes as a
transferential relationship towards Hitchcock, one which allows that
even the smallest details of his films are meaningful. This 'meaning-
fulness' extends to the fact that, for Žižek, Hitchcock's films portray
the three main types of subjectivity which correspond to the three
main stages of capitalism. Probably the best of the books edited by
Žižek (although well over a third is actually written by him as well),
this is a very entertaining and accessible mixture of film studies and
psychoanalysis.
Root Admin, Bots, Bureaucrats, flow-bot, oversight, Administrators, Widget editors
24,656
edits

Navigation menu