ABSTRACT

What is at stake in Freud’s enduring preoccupation with a process supposedly diverting sexuality into cultural activity? In this study, a leading scholar of psychoanalysis and literature re-opens the old question of sublimation in a critical reading that explores one of the last remaining puzzles of Freudian thought. Using the rigorous framework provided by Jean Laplanche, Luke Thurston resituates sublimation as an unfinished Freudian concept bound up with a much wider history of philosophical and literary reflection. Exploring the misunderstanding and reinvention of sublimation both in accounts of cultural history and in Lacan’s celebrated reading of Antigone, Thurston challenges some of the prevalent assumptions still seen in contemporary “theory.” Thurston links his critical investigation of psychoanalysis to modernist literature, discovering both parallels and alternatives to Freud’s idea of sublimation in little-known works by May Sinclair and David Jones. The study concludes by arguing that these modernist artists, both of whom were significantly affected by trauma during the First World War, produced work radically at odds with the established canons of representation, and that this “anti-hermeneutic” art can be linked to a “Copernican” sublimation, a process not controlled by the ego but vitalizing it and decentring its habitual structure.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Sublimation—The Unfinished Theory

part 1|156 pages

Metaphor and Metapsyche

chapter |17 pages

Theoretical Prologue

Translating Sublimation

chapter 1|53 pages

Freud

The Cleavage of Sense and Horror

chapter 2|50 pages

Sublimation and the Ethical

chapter 3|29 pages

Sublimation and Anti-Hermeneutics

chapter |5 pages

Interlude

Sublimation, War and Modernism

part 2|63 pages

Modernism

chapter 4|27 pages

May Sinclair at the Front

chapter 5|27 pages

Halsing David Jones

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

Primal Sublimation