Return to Delphi: on the relationship between literature and psychoanalysis

Author(s)

  • Marc De Kesel

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18352/relief.461

Keywords:

psychanalyse, Delphes, Oedipe, paradigmes

Abstract

Starting from an analysis of Oedipus’s oracle, this essay explores the essence of psychoanalytic theory, involving a critique of the paradigms of modern science. These paradigms, it argues, make modern science incapable of thinking the subject (including the subject of science itself). Because of this incapacity, another field of knowledge has emerged in modern times: the field of literature. This is why, as Freud already noted, psychoanalysis as a “science of the subject” and literature as “knowledge of the subject” share deep affinities. It is in the subject’s idiosyncratic engagement with reading or writing - and there alone - that the connection between literature and psychoanalysis is to be found. It is also there that we see why any attempt to apply psychoanalysis to literature is doomed to fail. Both psychoanalysis and literature must confront their affirmation of fiction in the face of its complete denial within the human sciences. At a time when the civilization of the image is replacing reality, this shared stance of literature and psychoanalysis is more necessary than ever.

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Published

2010-05-21

Issue

Section

Articles - thematic dossier

How to Cite

De Kesel, M. (2010) “Return to Delphi: on the relationship between literature and psychoanalysis”, RELIEF - REVUE ÉLECTRONIQUE DE LITTÉRATURE FRANÇAISE, 4(1), pp. 11–26. doi:10.18352/relief.461.