ABSTRACT

Performance Anxieties looks at the on-going debates over the value of psychoanalysis for feminist theory and politics--specifically concerning the social and psychical meanings of racialization. Beginning with an historicized return to Freud and the meaning of Jewishness in Freud's day, Ann Pellegrini indicates how "race" and racialization are not incidental features of psychoanalysis or of modern subjectivity, but are among the generative conditions of both.

Performance Anxieties stages a series of playful encounters between elite and popular performance texts--Freud meets Sarah Bernhardt meets Sandra Bernhard; Joan Riviere's masquerading women are refigured in relation to the hard female bodies in the film Pumping Iron II: The Women; and the Terminator and Alien films. In re-reading psychoanalysis alongside other performance texts, Pellegrini unsettles relations between popular and elite, performance and performative.

chapter |13 pages

The Seen Of Difference

Re-Sighting the Performative

part |50 pages

Jewishness

chapter |21 pages

Jewishness As Gender

Changing Fraud's Subject

chapter |9 pages

Entr' Acte

Portrait d'une Autre Dora

chapter |16 pages

You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real)

Sandra Bernhard's Whiteface

part |64 pages

Blackness

chapter |22 pages

Citing Identity, Sighting Identification

The Mirror Stages of Anna Deavere Smith

chapter |19 pages

Through The Looking Glass

chapter |20 pages

Between Men

Fanon, Memmi, and the Colonial Encounter

part |43 pages

Womanliness

chapter |17 pages

Femmes Futiles

Womanliness, Whiteness, and the Masquerade

chapter |8 pages

The Included Middle

Uncoupling Sex and Gender

chapter |15 pages

Oedipus Reps

Woman as Sequel