Julie's invocation of the unconscious

Julie Ingleton julieip at DIESEL.NET.AU
Mon Jan 11 03:11:35 UTC 1999


Dear Jim,
Thankyou for the information on Kristeva and Roudiez, some of which i am
familiar with.   The  allergies of  the  American Linguists and
anthropologists you speak of I am also familiar with as I participated in
some Anthropology lectures by an anti-pschology American anthropologist  a
few years ago. I will consider this topic a non-event for this list, lucky
for me I am also interested in discourse analysis and will be keeping watch.
Thanks again
Julie
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Wilce <jim.wilce at NAU.EDU>
To: DISCOURS at LINGUIST.LDC.UPENN.EDU <DISCOURS at LINGUIST.LDC.UPENN.EDU>
Date: Monday, January 11, 1999 6:33 AM
Subject: Julie's invocation of the unconscious


>Julie, you might want to read Kristeva.  American linguists and
>anthropologists (with some exceptions, such as Greg Urban) tend to be
>allergic to notions of the unconscious in anything like a Freudian sense,
>but French theorists and Francophone anthropologists like Ellen Corin do
>work that would appeal to you.
>
>Kristeva, J. (1980.). Desire in Language. New York:: Columbia University
Press.
>
>Kristeva, J. (1982). Powers of horror: An essay on abjection. (Leon S.
>Roudiez., Trans.). New York:: Columbia University Press.
>
>Kristeva, J. (1989.). Language- The Unknown :  An initiation Into
>Linguistics.  Translated by Anne M. Menke. New York : Columbia University
>Press.
>
>Jim Wilce
>      Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Coordinator of Asian Studies
>        Northern Arizona University
>        Box 15200
>        Flagstaff, AZ 86011-5200
>
>fax 520/523-9135
>office ph. 520/523-2729
>email jim.wilce at nau.edu
>http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~jmw22/ (includes information on my 1998 book,
>Eloquence in Trouble: The Poetics and Politics of Complaint in Rural
>Bangladesh)
>http://www.nau.edu/asian
>



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