Justice Denied: Literary, Legal and Psychoanalytic Denial in the Age of Modernism
Author(s) -
Vicky Sparrow
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
open library of humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.168
H-Index - 6
ISSN - 2056-6700
DOI - 10.16995/olh.490
Subject(s) - denial , modernism (music) , poetics , psychoanalytic theory , psychoanalysis , poetry , sociology , contradiction , literary criticism , law and literature , philosophy , literature , law , aesthetics , epistemology , psychology , art , political science
This article triangulates three scenes in which law, psychoanalysis and literary modernism intersect, in order to excavate differing conceptions of the idea of denial. The article begins with a consideration of the landmark censorship case against the editors of The Little Review, Margaret Anderson and Jane Heap, for serialising James Joyce’s ‘obscene’ modernism; the article then shifts to the poet HD’s account of psychoanalysis with Sigmund Freud; and finally reflects on how HD’s poetic practice re-articulates ideas around psychoanalysis, law and denial. Drawing on thinkers across the fields of poetics, psychoanalysis and critical legal studies, this article argues that the concept of denial indexes a fundamental tension between the theoretical frameworks of psychoanalysis and the law. This article further argues that HD’s poetic practice seeks a mode of writing which can both represent and resist such theoretical constraint and contradiction.
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