his article investigates David Foster Wallace's subversion of masculinity in Brief Interviews with Hideous Men. The loud and rambling monologues of the male characters embody instances of objectifying women, glorifying predatory sexuality, and equating masculinity with quick sexual gratification. The male characters, however, seem to be constantly plagued with the threatening presence of women. In the "Brief Interviews" sections of Wallace's collection of stories, the paradoxes and inconsistencies of the male discourse reveal the symptoms of male neurosis connected with the repressed female, the most conspicuous evidence of which is the silenced figure of the female therapist/interviewer. Rendered through dark and subversive humour, the symptoms indicate the male anxieties related with the inability to represent women. Drawing on the central concepts of Lacan and Freud, I aim to show the ways in which Wallace undermines the hegemonic notions of masculinity through his subversive use of the symptom. I argue that Wallace's portrayals of the interviewees' enjoyment of the symptom underlies his subversive ridicule of the male attempts of sustaining the illusory pleasure.
Eser Adı (dc.title) | Enjoying the Symptom: David Foster Wallace’s Brief Interviews with Hideous Men |
Yazar (dc.contributor.author) | Ferma Lekesizalın |
Yayın Yılı (dc.date.issued) | 2023 |
Tür (dc.type) | Makale |
Özet (dc.description.abstract) | his article investigates David Foster Wallace's subversion of masculinity in Brief Interviews with Hideous Men. The loud and rambling monologues of the male characters embody instances of objectifying women, glorifying predatory sexuality, and equating masculinity with quick sexual gratification. The male characters, however, seem to be constantly plagued with the threatening presence of women. In the "Brief Interviews" sections of Wallace's collection of stories, the paradoxes and inconsistencies of the male discourse reveal the symptoms of male neurosis connected with the repressed female, the most conspicuous evidence of which is the silenced figure of the female therapist/interviewer. Rendered through dark and subversive humour, the symptoms indicate the male anxieties related with the inability to represent women. Drawing on the central concepts of Lacan and Freud, I aim to show the ways in which Wallace undermines the hegemonic notions of masculinity through his subversive use of the symptom. I argue that Wallace's portrayals of the interviewees' enjoyment of the symptom underlies his subversive ridicule of the male attempts of sustaining the illusory pleasure. |
Açık Erişim Tarihi (dc.date.available) | 2024-03-19 |
Yayıncı (dc.publisher) | Unisa Press |
Dil (dc.language.iso) | En |
Konu Başlıkları (dc.subject) | Jouissance |
Konu Başlıkları (dc.subject) | Masculinity |
Konu Başlıkları (dc.subject) | Objet petit a |
Konu Başlıkları (dc.subject) | The male discourse |
Konu Başlıkları (dc.subject) | The symbolic order |
Konu Başlıkları (dc.subject) | The symptom |
Tek Biçim Adres (dc.identifier.uri) | https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14081/2007 |
ISSN (dc.identifier.issn) | 0256-4718 |
Dergi (dc.relation.journal) | Lekesizalın, Ferma |
Esere Katkı Sağlayan (dc.contributor.other) | Lekesizalın, Ferma |
DOI (dc.identifier.doi) | 10.25159/1753-5387/13519 |
Orcid (dc.identifier.orcid) | 0000-0002-2935-2013 |
Dergi Cilt (dc.identifier.volume) | 39 |
wosauthorid (dc.contributor.wosauthorid) | AAK-4554-2020 |
Department (dc.contributor.department) | İngiliz Dili ve Edebiyatı |
Wos No (dc.identifier.wos) | WOS:001177107400001 |
Veritabanları (dc.source.platform) | Wos |
Veritabanları (dc.source.platform) | Scopus |