
Paris and the Fetish
Primal Crime Scenes
Alistair Charles Rolls(Author)
Rodopi (Publisher)
Published on 1. January 2014
Book
Paperback/Softback
184 pages
978-90-420-3777-9 (ISBN)
Description
Freud's 1927 essay on the acquisition of a screen memory, or fetish, allows the subject to come to terms with the traumatic truth that, for him, dominates the present moment (in Freud's scenario, the truth of mother's sexuality) by maintaining, alongside and not in place of it, a parallel story of the past (the myth of the phallic mother). In this book Freud's theory of the fetish, and in particular this way of allowing two opposed and ostensibly mutually exclusive narratives to co-exist, is used to provide a number of Parisian crime texts with radical new solutions. The fetishistic world-view of Charles Baudelaire's poetics will be shown to provide the template for all overvalued instances of women passing by; notably, it will be seen how the famous assault on one of Christian Dior's models as she displayed the New Look for the first time in Montmartre in 1947 depends on a fetish erected in the poem "A une passante". The same Paris streets allow red herrings to be raised to the status of truth in novels by Fred Vargas, Leo Malet and Frederic Cathala. In these texts the discovery of a primal scene allows doubt to be cast over authorial solutions and new murderers or victims to be found. In the case of Jean-Paul Sartre's La Nausee, the fetishism at work is shown to have harboured a serial killer where no crime was previously considered to have taken place. In these analyses, fetishism is mapped onto prose poetics, intertextuality and deconstruction in order to challenge the way we read text. More importantly, rereading these texts allows us to see fetishism in a new light as a force for positive, creative acts of meaning-making.
More details
Series
33
Language
English
Place of publication
Leiden
Netherlands
Publishing group
Brill
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 155 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
Weight
286 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-420-3777-9 (9789042037779)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Alistair Rolls is Associate Professor of French Studies at the University of Newcastle, Australia. He is the author of The Flight of the Angels: Intertextuality in Four Novels by Boris Vian (Rodopi, 1999) and, with Deborah Walker, of French and American Noir: Dark Crossings (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).
Content
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Paris, Capital of Fetishism: The Fashion of Looking (Again and Again) at the Woman Passing By
Deciphering the Hieroglyphic in Frederic Cathala's L'Arbalete: La vraie vie commence
Not Seeing (and Seeing) the Wolves for the Trees: Unrepresenting Hyperclarity in Fred Vargas's L'Homme a l'envers
Roquentin's Primal Scene, Or What is and What is Not Seen in La Nausee
Leo Malet's Troubled Waters, Or How to Have Your Femme Fatale and Kill Her
Bibliography
Index
Introduction
Paris, Capital of Fetishism: The Fashion of Looking (Again and Again) at the Woman Passing By
Deciphering the Hieroglyphic in Frederic Cathala's L'Arbalete: La vraie vie commence
Not Seeing (and Seeing) the Wolves for the Trees: Unrepresenting Hyperclarity in Fred Vargas's L'Homme a l'envers
Roquentin's Primal Scene, Or What is and What is Not Seen in La Nausee
Leo Malet's Troubled Waters, Or How to Have Your Femme Fatale and Kill Her
Bibliography
Index