The Transdisciplinary Connections Forum on Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature brings literary scholarship into conversation with psychological and psychoanalytic theories and practice. Our members include both psychoanalytic theorists and critics, and scholars who examine psychological and psychoanalytic influences on modern and contemporary literature and culture. We welcome members working from any theoretical orientation, on any time period, and in all literary fields.
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Jesse Miller deposited Antinomian Remedies: Rehabilitative Futurism, Towards a Better Life , and Kenneth Burke’s Modernist Equipment for Living in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 8 months ago
This essay examines the relationship between modernist formal experimentation and rehabilitative futurism, the modern cultural fantasy of a hygienic future in which all illness and disability have been eradicated. Through a reading of Kenneth Burke’s early essay collection Counter-Statement (1931) and his first and only novel, Towards a Better…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Essays on the Lord of the Rings in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 8 months ago
Full collection of four essays on J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Lord of the Rings,” comprising “Lord of the Rings: the anti-adventure,” “Reader’s Guide to the Fellowship of the Ring,” “Reader’s Guide to the Two Towers,” and “The (True) Lord of the Ring.” Emphasis throughout is to suggest that it is not just wise but essential to encounter very, very…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited A Reader’s Guide to the Two Towers in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 8 months ago
This essay serves as a guardian, as a true friend of the reader, encouraging them to recognize that if they identify with the hobbits in this book, to be wary of the text trains the reader to become someone who would mistake their actual proud moments of self-decision, self-realization… of bravery, of the genuine kind, for something evil or bad,…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Reader’s Guide to Fellowship of the Ring in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 8 months ago
Delineates how much of J.R.R. Tolkien’s “Fellowship of the Ring” is about preparing Frodo especially so that if caught out alone, he’d never dare venture a decent listen to anyone who might attempt to sway him to consider the due fate for the Ring, other than according to Gandalf’s specifications. Positions the text as one that bates the reader…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Grabbing Hold for Departure’s Sake in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 8 months ago
Explores how Max Vigne, from Andrea Barrett’s “Servants of the Map,” makes use of the dangerous Himalayan mountain environment as almost as Winnicottian “play space,” in which to recover from being requited to a life of obligation, rather than real-self discovery, after his mother’s death.
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Matricide in the City in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Explores the invisible man, in Ralph Ellison’s “The Invisible Man,” as borrowing upon associations of patriarchal maleness, in the sense Ann Douglas in her “Terrible Honesty” argues 20s modern’s did, to secure freedom from feelings of entrapment by maternal figures, whose near-proximity to him is expressed in the text as often incestuous, gross;…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Consolidating Gains in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
A review of Stanley Kunitz’s poetry, emphasizing how he used his poetry to both explore and manage his relationship with his dominating mother. Argues that none of Kunitz’s elegies work as conventional elegies, or as we traditionally understand or expect them to work, but more as working their way to the direction Peter Sacks advocates, as…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Getting Noticed in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Explores select works of Matthew Arnold, as well as Robert Browning’s “Caliban Upon Setebos” and Edward Fitzgerald’s “Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám,” for evidence that societal growth during the late 19th-century was done not entirely in hopes of leaving previous authorities behind, of accepting and dealing with felt feelings of being abandoned for…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Maintaining the Peace in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Explores Tennyson’s “The Lady of Shalott” as a space-world where anxious Victorians might place the perhaps exciting but also anxiety-producing New to subsume its affect of disequilibrium within the sturdy, assured and predictable.
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Useful Object in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Explores Maureen Folan, in Martin McDonagh’s “The Beauty Queen of Leenane,” as a psychological borderline, someone who is afraid to achieve a man she can have a relationship with, and so defaults to using him as simply another object she can use in warfare against a mother she is only yet capable of playing at being able to leave behind her.
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited The Devil Made Me Enjoy It in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Explores how Cormac McCarthy’s “Blood Meridian” encourages, more than identification with, but an impressing oneself within “the kid,” and makes all of his adventures with Glanton and his outriders a ride we thrill at, even if at times very much secretly — as with the slaughter of the indigenous camp. Glanton is a phallic “hero” for us; it is the…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Splendid Isolation and Cruel Returns in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Challenges Robinson Crusoe’s ability, in “Robinson Crusoe,” to be honest with himself about how much he was actually glad Fortune stepped into remove him out of his father’s grasp. And, as well, Gulliver’s presumption, In “Gulliver’s Travels,” that he would really have preferred Fortune had not stepped in and removed him from endless more days in…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Worthy Companions in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Compares Evelina, from Frances Burney’s “Evelina,” and Werther, from Goethe’s “Young Werther.” Argues that though they could readily be made to seem opposite to one another, as they seek company with such disparate groups of people, the difference is superficial, and their motivations, the same — namely, to make use of their associations with…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited “Mi Casa, Su Casa” in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Explores Quentin Tarantino’s “Pulp Fiction” as if it were experienced by many viewers of a particular type — SCM’s: suburban, collegiate young men — as a feeling out of how they might contrive themselves so that their future development would not place them as identifiable as losers by he-men pulp figures they’d learned early represent…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Securing their Worth in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Compares how “Treasure Island” and “Charlotte’s Web” demonstrate how protagonist avatars for ourselves establish they truly matter to “parents” who pretend to value them but whose true lack of interest in them as individuals can’t be mistaken. Argues for seeing stories as recognizing the problem of “not being seen” by parents, and as them as…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Greedy For Your Hurt in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Explores the ability of the narrator to be honest with the difficulties — not displace, repress, elide/evade concerns — they had in their mother-child relationship, in several works of literature, including Cocteau’s “Les Enfants Terribles,” Alice Munro’s “Lives of Girls and Women.” and Andrea Ashworth’s “Once in a House on Fire.”
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Sinister Advances and Sweet Returns in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Explores how “Ode to a Grecian Urn” reads as a discovery of the discovery for the poet of the importance of an object, not primarily as something he might master, but something he submits to. Story of the withdrawal of status, and re-projection of “art,” status, onto an object, after brief experience of the effects of being abandoned its authority.
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Privileging Marlow in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Argues that the way in which Marlow is presented, ensures that Joseph Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness” is vulnerable as a text that ostensibly helps justify the maintenance of separate spheres between men and women; argues that Marlow’s successful agency is more about his being craftily evasive, a man who doesn’t impose but dodges.
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Marcher’s Merger in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Explores how Henry James’s “The Beast in the Jungle” reads exactly as the sort of clinging back to a projected mother-figure, after freedom began to spell feelings of abandonment that psychically were proving increasingly intolerable, that object relations therapists finds in patients. Delineates how much of the story amounts to a tussle between…[Read more]
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Patrick McEvoy-Halston deposited Haunting Raveloe in the group
TC Psychology, Psychoanalysis, and Literature on MLA Commons 4 years, 9 months ago
Exploration of how “Silas Marner” is George Eliot’s means to distinguish herself from those who are truly guilty of abandoning parental mores… ancestors, parents, themselves. An argument is made that the reason for the text is as provision for the author to temporarily relieve herself of guilt.
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