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Antigone's claim : kinship between life & death

Part of the The Wellek Library Lectures series
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Antigone, the renowned insurgent from Sophocles's "Oedipus", has long been a feminist icon of defiance, but what has remained unclear is whether she escapes from the forms of power that she opposes.

Antigone proves to be a more ambivalent figure for feminism than has been acknowledged, since the form of defiance she exemplifies also leads to her death.

Butler argues that Antigone represents a form of feminist and sexual agency that is fraught with risk.

Moreover, Antigone shows how the constraints of normative kinship unfairly decide what will and will not be a livable life.Butler explores the meaning of Antigone, wondering what forms of kinship might have allowed her to live.

Along the way, she considers the works of such philosophers as Hegel, Lacan and Irigaray.

How, she asks, would psychoanalysis have been different if it had taken Antigone - the "postoedipal" subject - rather than Oedipus as its point of departure?

If the incest taboo is reconceived so that it does not mandate heterosexuality as its solution, what forms of sexual alliance and new kinship might be acknowledged as a result?

The book relates the courageous deeds of Antigone to the claims made by those whose relations are still not honoured as those of proper kinship, showing how a culture of normative heterosexuality obstructs our capacity to see what sexual freedom and political agency could be.

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Product Details
Columbia University Press
0231118953 / 9780231118958
Paperback / softback
292.13
23/05/2002
United States
English
x, 103 p.
23 cm
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