ABSTRACT

Writing the Passions is a book of literary criticism, of philosophy and of the politics of modernity. It explores the arguments on the location of feeling in literature; on the fragmentation of the self under the pressure of the passions; of the place of the passions in psychoanalytic practice and theory; and on the notions of multiplicity, soul, spirit, polytheism and animism developed from their bases in psychoanalytic and Derridean theory.

The relations between writing and the passions are addressed through individual texts, ranging across many centuries and from Europe to China. Writers and texts discussed include Plato, Andrew Marvell, Swinburne, Salman Rushdie, Iain Banks, Deleuze, Guattari and many others. Topics addressed include: the meaning of crime passionnel; art and the wound; passion and ceremonial; adoration and abjection; dread and disgust; the nature of the exotic; shame and irony; separation, incompletion and the cure.

Written in a uniquely engaging and accessible style, Writing the Passions provides readers with a fascinating exploration of the general notion of 'the passions', together with a set of historical insights into how the passions have been considered and treated in different literatures and cultures.


chapter |29 pages

The Passions

Problems of Multiplicity and Meaning

chapter |23 pages

Towards a Passional History

Platonism and Buddhism

chapter |27 pages

Boundaries of Passion in the Renaissance

Crashaw and Marvell

chapter |28 pages

Adoration and Abjection

Smart and Swinburne

chapter |26 pages

The Contemporary Passional

Lust, Transparency, The Crypt

chapter |25 pages

Passion, Shame and Irony

The Terror of the True

chapter |25 pages

Mysteries of the Passions

Magic Body, Magic Text