Wir verwenden Cookies und Analyse-Tools, um die Nutzerfreundlichkeit der Internet-Seite zu verbessern und für Marketingzwecke. Wenn Sie fortfahren, diese Seite zu verwenden, nehmen wir an, dass Sie damit einverstanden sind. Zur Datenschutzerklärung.
Debt and Payback through the Vegetal Imagination
Details
This book is a close and highly original reading of Han Kang's The Vegetarian. Its central concern is that of the violence in the novel directed towards the female protagonist Yeong-hye and in respect to Han Kang's notion of 'innocence.' Employing a sophisticated theoretical approach, the book will argue that Yeong-hye is the epitome of someone trying to embrace the victims of a violent history, symbolized in the novel as uprooted trees. To make this case, Gaston Bachelard's concept of the 'vegetal imagination' will be incorporated within a broader poststructural-psychoanalytic context, namely that of Jacque Lacan's key concepts of the Real and Fantasy. Further still cultural economics will provide further insight in relationship to Margaret Atwood's notion of 'debt' and 'payback,' accounting for Yeong-hye's deeper motivations, crystalized as 'moral debt.' As William Skidelsky insightfully illuminates in his review of Atwood's book, Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth; "At a time when so many of us are mired in debts of the financial variety, it is worth remembering that it is the other, non-financial debts that we owe-to the planet, and to each other[...]."
Autorentext
Jihyun Lee - Department of English Literature, Kyungpook National University, Daegu, Republic of Korea Teaching a Writing class in Philosophy & Humanities at Hosan University Former business consultant of Automotive parts companies Publications: "Alienation and Love in "A Painful Case": From a Lacanian Perspective," etc.
Klappentext
This book is a close and highly original reading of Han Kang's The Vegetarian. Its central concern is that of the violence in the novel directed towards the female protagonist Yeong-hye and in respect to Han Kang's notion of 'innocence.' Employing a sophisticated theoretical approach, the book will argue that Yeong-hye is the epitome of someone trying to embrace the victims of a violent history, symbolized in the novel as uprooted trees. To make this case, Gaston Bachelard's concept of the 'vegetal imagination' will be incorporated within a broader poststructural-psychoanalytic context, namely that of Jacque Lacan's key concepts of the Real and Fantasy. Further still cultural economics will provide further insight in relationship to Margaret Atwood's notion of 'debt' and 'payback,' accounting for Yeong-hye's deeper motivations, crystalized as 'moral debt.' As William Skidelsky insightfully illuminates in his review of Atwood's book, Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth; "At a time when so many of us are mired in debts of the financial variety, it is worth remembering that it is the other, non-financial debts that we owe-to the planet, and to each other[...]."
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09786202060394
- Genre Humanities
- Sprache Englisch
- Anzahl Seiten 68
- Herausgeber LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
- Größe H220mm x B150mm
- Jahr 2017
- EAN 9786202060394
- Format Kartonierter Einband
- ISBN 978-620-2-06039-4
- Veröffentlichung 19.12.2017
- Titel Debt and Payback through the Vegetal Imagination
- Autor Jihyun Lee
- Untertitel Atwood's Payback and Han's The Vegetarian